Viewing 1 current event matching “plug” by Location.
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Thursday
Dec 5
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting: Ben Koenig on a Linux Changelog, the Sequel – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 As a follow up to my talk in September I will go over some of the updates/changes the project for changelog data tracking. In particular, I will showcase some of the technical details involved in collecting data, organizing the database, and then making that data available via a forward facing web app. One of the primary goals is to build a data dashboard that people can view over the internet without using javascript based web frameworks. The server side code is written in the D programming language and I will demonstrate the pros and cons of this approach. |
Viewing 154 past events matching “plug” by Location.
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Thursday
Sep 5, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Virtual Private Networks – Virtual Private Networking Our illustrious IPv6 authority, Ted Mittelstaedt, will give a talk on popular Virtual Private Network options, including: 1) standard IPSec clients - require static IP at each endpoint, and are supported out of the box by Windows, Cisco IOS, Mac, and Unix using raccoon and similar programs. 2) Modified IPSec VPN clients - example is the Cisco IPSec VPN client. This is a proprietary modification used to allow one end to have a dynamic IP number. 3) SSL VPN clients. Cisco has one they call AnyConnect that is proprietary. OpenVPN is another example. 4) PPTP. This was supposed to have died years ago but since Microsoft ships the PPTP client with Windows it is still very useful in situations where the network admin is forced to provide VPN services to clients that she has no control over. 5) L2TP. This is what PPTP morphed into, Microsoft supports it natively, so it has the same benefits (to the network admin) as PPTP plus the Microsoft implementation allows for encryption using IPSec with certificates. Ted is the Co-Owner of Portlandia IT and author of the FreeBSD Corporate Networker's Guide Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
Tuesday
Feb 18, 2014
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PLUG AT: Protecting Your Volunteer Effort from Caustic People – PLUG has been lucky. Some volunteer efforts and organizations face onslaughts that drive off their core volunteers and can hijack or snuff the organization. Hear the lessons learned from five such examples and share your own stories of how to recognize and respond to such behavior. Early segue into tech topics or refreshments recommended! Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. See you there! Michael Dexter PLUG Volunteer |
Thursday
Dec 4, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Conference Warrior – Who: Michael Dexter and YOU I do not think of myself as a big conference goer though I have been to various instantiations of PLUG, OpenSourceBridge, OSCON, CLS, Monitorama, DjangoCon, LinuxCon, Linuxfest Northwest, SCALE, MySQL, FOSDEM, LinuxTag, CeBIT, Systems.de, BSDCan, EuroBSDcon, AsiaBSDCon, OpenCON, bhyveCon, Slackathon, Supercomputing, MeetBSD, NYCBSDCon, InfoBALT, various Latvian events, that IT expo that used to come through Portland and a few I am completely spacing. I have also spoken or exhibited at some of these plus organized a few of the tiny ones. At the public prompting of Brian P. Martin, I will discuss why on Earth someone would do such a thing over and over. Including: How to and why attend How to and why speak How to and why exhibit How to and why organize events How to put on the best event possible on really short notice Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
Jan 18, 2011
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Artificial Neural Networks: Principles and Applications – Free Geek Cooper Stevenson is rescheduled to give his talk: Artificial Neural Networks: Principles and Applications Cooper will cover how the topic is relevant to Open Source as ANN's may be used for a host of practical applications and serve as an introduction to ANN's running on Open Source. Emphasis will be placed on the financial industry's use of ANN's for market prediction but other uses will be addressed. Cooper Stevenson's Bio: Cooper is a leading expert in Information Technology systems for business automation. His award winning designs focus on expanding business intelligence and automation for medium and large industry. He moved Legislation through the Oregon Legislature and has written over ten publications for online resources. He is also featured in CNET News, Linux Today, and Linux.com. Recently, Cooper developed the first automated artificial neural network system for predicting financial securities price fluctuations and business process intelligence. Free Geek: 1731 SE 10th Avenue: Two blocks south of Hawthorne, not far from the Lucky Lab. If lost: 503-232-9350 Big news and reason for the delay of this announcement: we have a new, dedicated keyholder! |
Tuesday
Mar 15, 2011
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Release your hardware hacker potential with gEDA – Free Geek March PLUG Advanced Topics: Embedded Hardware Developer Eric Thompson Release your hardware hacker potential with gEDA This session will take you step-by-step through the process of creating an actual printed circuit board using the gEDA suite of electronic design automation tools. From schematic to gerber files, you can do all with the open source tools in gEDA. The gEDA project is a full GPL’d suite of electronic design automation tools. The suite includes tools for schematic capture, attribute management, bill of materials (BOM) generation, netlist creation, analog and digital simulation, and printed circuit board (PCB) layout. This session will cover: - Drawing a block diagram - Creating parts and drawing a schematic - Netlist creation and import into the printed circuit board tool - Layout of the printed circuit board - Outputting gerber files - Design verification - How to have your printed circuit board built This session will be presented for the beginner and will assume no previous hardware experience. gEDA website: http://www.gpleda.org/ 7PM Tuesday, March 15th at Free Geek: 1731 SE 10TH AVE |
Sunday
Oct 16, 2011
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PLUG Linux Clinic – Free Geek The Portland Linux / Unix Group Holds its Linux Clinic on the third Sunday of every month at Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, 97214 from 1 to 5 pm. Bring your Linux computer that's being a brat and we'll make it behave like a model of decorum. Or bring your computer and we'll turn it into a beautiful Linux box. It's also acceptable just to show up and look over shoulders to see what Linux is all about. We have mice, keyboards and monitors, so normally all you need to bring is the box. For further information e-mail [email protected]. |
Sunday
Nov 20, 2011
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PLUG Linux Clinic – Free Geek The Portland Linux / Unix Group Holds its Linux Clinic on the third Sunday of every month at Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, 97214 from 1 to 5 pm. Bring your Linux computer that's being a brat and we'll make it behave like a model of decorum. Or bring your computer and we'll turn it into a beautiful Linux box. It's also acceptable just to show up and look over shoulders to see what Linux is all about. We have mice, keyboards and monitors, so normally all you need to bring is the box. For further information e-mail [email protected]. |
Sunday
Dec 18, 2011
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PLUG Linux Clinic – Free Geek The Portland Linux / Unix Group Holds its Linux Clinic on the third Sunday of every month at Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, 97214 from 1 to 5 pm. Bring your Linux computer that's being a brat and we'll make it behave like a model of decorum. Or bring your computer and we'll turn it into a beautiful Linux box. It's also acceptable just to show up and look over shoulders to see what Linux is all about. We have mice, keyboards and monitors, so normally all you need to bring is the box. For further information e-mail [email protected]. |
Tuesday
Apr 16, 2013
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Graphite – Free Geek Graphite - Scalable Realtime Graphing http://graphite.wikidot.com/ This talk will be my choices as to why I selected collectd / Graphite for performance monitoring my environment at home (email / web / database and test systems). The discussion will include what I looked at, why I discarded the software I did, and show some demonstrations of Graphite, Munin, and if I can get it working again, Ganglia for a comparison of some of their features. I will also discuss some of the hicups I found in configuring some aspects of collectd and Graphite. Biography Tim Bruce has been involved in computers since 1981 when he first fell in love with computing. He's done computer training, computer security, programming, systems administration and data management. For the last 14 years he's worked as a Database Administrator with Sybase, SQL Server, and PostgreSQL at employers such as Providence Health Systems, Fiserv, FlightStats, and currently with Northwest Evaluation Association. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. Thank you Igal. We will never forget you. |
Tuesday
May 21, 2013
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PLUG Advanced Topics: The KURB Kernel/UseRspace Bridge – Free Geek Jacob Riddle will discuss the KURB (Kernel/UseRspace Bridge) project. The goal of KURB is a kernel independent driver subsystem for Linux. The talk will include the architecture of KURB, the reasons for KURB, and how to get involved. Jacob Riddle is in the Game Development program at Lane Community College. Prior to that he was a Nuclear Machinist Mate in the Navy. He as a passion for all things Computer Science with a particular focus on Artificial Intelligence and kernel operations. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. |
Tuesday
Aug 20, 2013
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Hands-on Valgrind: Better programs thru technology – Free Geek The Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics meeting Software Verification and Performance Analysis using Valgrind by Stephen Dum Valgrind is a collection of tools to validate your (typically C or C++ compiled) program. It can validate correct usage of memory, profile your program, profile heap usage and verify proper thread usage. This talk gives an overview of valgrind and how it can be used, with emphasis on memory usage verification and profiling. About Steve: Spent decades dealing with large projects (multi-million lines of code) writing code, automating build processes and automated testing of the code. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. |
Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics through Free Geek Portland's 12-month, three-track open source conference The Portland Linux/Unix Group meets three times a month: First Thursday General Meeting at PSU Third Tuesday Advanced Topics Meeting at Free Geek Third Sunday Clinic at Free Geek We try announce our speakers two weeks in advance but some times it is last minute. They're usually conference-quality none the less. Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
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Tuesday
Sep 17, 2013
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PLUG Advanced Topics: GUI Programming with Qt – Free Geek Michael Faunce of Memorytime will talk about the Qt GUI toolkit and how and why he used it on a recent project. Mike is the owner of Memorytime and has been involved with technology since 1972 has seen and used a Slide Rule. He came to oregon in 1976 to work at Tektronix and taught classes at Wilsonville Tektronix plant. While there he deisgned Memory boards for the ATARI computer and also taught at PCC for a short time. Mike has designed a number of memory board and SBC (single board computer) systems. Mike has three patents and recently served as an expert witness in a recent patent infringement case and currently involved in a number of design projects including a customizable LED sign and a PXE Boot server. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. See you there! |
Tuesday
Oct 15, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Virtual Machine Fair – Free Geek Who: Daniel Hedlund, Michael Dexter and a few special guests What: Virtual Machine Fair: Erlang/ocaml/Haskell VMs, bhyve, Xen & LXCs! Why: The pursuit of technology freedom Contain yourselves! Daniel and Michael have been working with various virtual machines technologies and would like to have a roundtable style talk with micro presentations about each one, including: Erlang VMs bhyve BSD Hypervisor VMs Xen VM's Haskell VMs (hopefully) and Linux Containers if we can rattle a familiar PLUG face's cage We've invited a few guests and will give you a survey of some of the great things going on with open source virtualization technology. Links: http://halvm.org/ http://www.openmirage.org/ http://bhyve.org Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting See you there! |
Tuesday
Nov 19, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Android App Collusion – Free Geek Who: Rogan Creswick The Android permission model opens up a number of opportunities for apps to bypass the established single-app permission checks that Android users rely on to control data flow and application behavior on their devices. I'll do my best to terrify the Android-using audience by describing the attack surface for colluding applications and showing interactive visualizations of multi-app data flow. We'll look at the Android permission model, the user-interface it results in, and I'll show just how easy it is to make apps that look innocuous. Bio: Rogan Creswick develops unique tools and techniques for software development and security analysis at Galois, Inc. His research interests focus on improving the state of the art in software engineering tools and user interfaces. His experience also reaches into the areas of user interface automation and customization via integrated assistants and automated documentation aides at IBM Research. He has striven to provide natural interfaces to ease communication with complex and semi-sentient agents through existing tools that have already become trustworthy and familiar to their users. Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting See you there! |
Tuesday
Dec 17, 2013
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Lustre Distributed File System – Free Geek PLUG Advanced Topics: Implementation and use of the Lustre file system within a research institution. Lustre is a type of parallel distributed file system, generally used for large-scale cluster computing. (http://lustre.org) Rob Stites - Research Associate OHSU Rob works with several compute clusters, each using the Lustre file system at OHSU. He works with three distinct groups at OHSU; Geonomic testing, electron microscope image analysis and speech analysis. Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting See you there! |
Tuesday
Jan 21, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Speaking in Public is Easy – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Announcement Who: Brian Rohan and Michael Dexter What: Speaking in Public is Easy Where: Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, Portland (Left Entrance) When: Tuesday, January 21st, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom You read that right: Speaking in public is easy and there is nothing stopping you from giving the next informative and compelling PLUG talk.
Brian and Michael will give you a pragmatic tour of exactly what is involved in open source conference speaking and explain precisely how nothing is stopping you from getting involved thanks to local organizations like the Portland Linux/Unix Group. Brian says: In 2007 I made the switch from being a machinist to a real estate agent, shortly thereafter I was invited to investigate a Toastmasters club, in order to become a better communicator. Through 5 years and over 40 speeches in Toastmasters I reached the highest level of Distinguished Toastmaster. Simply stepping out of my comfort zone has given me the opportunity introduce dignitaries, and MC fund-raising events for worthwhile causes (notably a record breaking Clark County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner auction). Currently I am a recognized top 2% leader in AdvoCare International, helping others achieve their physical and financial goals. I enjoy using Linux on a personal level for the freedom that it represents. "You never get rid of public speaking butterflies, you just get them to fly in formation: ~Marv Serhan Michael says: Never in a 1,000 years will I speak in public yet I find myself doing it several times a month in Portland and at conferences around the world. I guarantee I'm no Brian Rohan but I fill rooms and get applause. The secret is finding the right room and just doing it. I will talk about the absolute worst that can happen (rarely what you think it would be), the open source conference community and how to get from submitting a proposal to stepping down from the stage. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. |
Tuesday
Mar 18, 2014
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Dynamic Tracing with DTrace and SystemTap - Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics – Free Geek Daniel Hedlund will be giving an intermediate to advanced level talk on DTrace and SystemTap. DTrace (http://dtrace.org/blogs/about/) is a dynamic tracing framework, originally developed for Solaris, has been released under the CDDL license and ported to many other Unix-like OSes including FreeBSD, OS X and Linux. SystemTap (https://sourceware.org/systemtap/) provides similar functionality to DTrace but is Linux specific and released under the GPL. Dynamic tracing tools make it possible to safely inject instrumentation points (probes) into running applications on production environments; no recompilation is necessary and there is only minimal performance overhead when being used, and no overhead when not. Probes can be used to gather performance metrics to identify bottlenecks, create aggregate statistics such as the size distribution of filesystem writes, or to introspect arguments passed to individual functions in a running application without ever taking it offline. Many attendees will break for a social hour after the Third Tuesday meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting PLUG: Portland's monthly, three-track tech conference! First Thursday: General Meeting at PSU Third Tuesday: Advanced Topics at Free Geek Third Sunday: Hands-on Clinic at Free Geek See you there! |
Tuesday
Apr 15, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Heartbleed & apcupsd – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Announcement Who: Ted Mittelstaedt What: Heartbleed: It's cause, the solution, lessons learned plus apcupsd Where: Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, Portland (Left Entrance) When: Tuesday, April 15th, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom The "Heartbleed" OpenSSL bug potentially impacts everyone who has used the Internet but was simple enough to explain in an XKCD cartoon. Ted Mittelstaedt will enlighten us about it and the issues surrounding it. Ted has also been experimenting with APC's new UPC interface and apcupsd. He will share his findings on this. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. See you there! |
Tuesday
May 20, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Hands-on Internet of Things – Free Geek Who: Sean Mathews What: Hands-on Internet of Things Where: Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, Portland (Left Entrance) When: Tuesday, May 20th, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom Sean Mathews will present Hands-on Internet of Things: Building the next “Internet Of Things” device using a Raspberry Pi or Beagle Bone Black and simple electronics. Sean will take us though how to prototype and build a Raspberry Pi GPIO board for as lows as $6 per board and under a month. Learn about the Raspberry Pi GPIO header and how you can use it to talk to your card. Sean has built assembly line automation solutions for over 20 years Sean Mathews has over 30 years of computer hardware, software and database design and development. Sean started writing assembly language and Basic on TRS-80 and Pet computers in the late 70's at the age of 9. At 16 he started his first company writing software written in C to help developers keep track of revision history of C source code for MODCOMP computers in the mid 80's. Currently he designs embedded and cloud based solutions at NuTech Software Solutions which he founded in 1996 and sells a line of embedded alarm devices for consumers that are sold worldwide. Many attendees will break for a social hour after the Third Tuesday meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting See you there! |
Tuesday
Jun 17, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Git 2.0 – Free Geek Who: Alan Olsen What: Git 2.0 Where: Free Geek, 1731 SE 10th Avenue, Portland (Left Entrance) When: Tuesday, June 17th, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom On May 28th, version 2.0 of the Git version control software was released. This talk will be on the changes and new features that come along with the 2.0 release, as well as the changes the steps to build and install the software. Alan Olsen started using Linux in 1994 with the Yggdrasil distribution. He has been involved with PLUG for far to long and ran Advanced Topics for 8 years. He has been programming since 1972 and working in the computer industry since 1984. He is old. He has built a log of software, hacked a lot of kernels, written too many scripts and is still finding more to learn and do in the Linux environment. Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. See you there! |
Tuesday
Jul 15, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: GO TO OSCON – Free Geek We will not be having a meeting tonight but you are welcome to meet at the Lucky Lab. See you at OSCON! PLUG: Portland's monthly, three-track tech conference! First Thursday: General Meeting at PSU Third Tuesday: Advanced Topics at Free Geek Third Sunday: Hands-on Clinic at Free Geek PLUG will celebrate 20 years of delivering conference-quality Linux, Unix and technology speakers this year! Most speakers are announced about two weeks in advance but some are last minute. Watch Calagator and the PLUG mailing lists for the latest news. Many attendees will break for a social hour after the Third Tuesday meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting See you there! |
Tuesday
Aug 19, 2014
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Software-Defined Radio Hack Session – Free Geek Who: Jared Boone, Kenny McElroy and you Software-Defined Radio Hack Session Want to get into software-defined radio hacking but don't know where to start? Bring your laptop and an RTL-SDR dongle, HackRF, BladeRF, USRP, or other SDR hardware to this hack session and get expert help. Jared Boone and Kenny McElroy will be on hand to help install and configure software and explain concepts. Do try to install GNU Radio on your computer before you come, since it can be a long, slow process. If you get into trouble, we will do their best to get you unstuck. For those who come with GNU Radio already functional, we will advise you on things to experiment with. If you do not already own a software-defined radio, purchasing an RTL-SDR dongle from HackerWarehouse.com or NooElec.com is recommended. They are quite inexpensive ($15 to $20) but very functional and a great way to get started in software-defined radio. Bring some radio-based toys to hack on! If you can't make this meeting, be sure to watch Calagator, where Jared and Kenny will be starting an SDR meetup in the next few weeks. Jared Boone has an ongoing obsession with software-defined radio. He helped with the design and coding of the HackRF SDR and has done some privacy-related work, particularly around automotive tire pressure monitors. He is a frequent user of GNU Radio, baudline, and radio signal processing techniques. Kenny McElroy is a computer security researcher, focused on improving understanding and visualization of how the ones and zeros of computer security move around in the real world. Organizer's Notes: Ham Radio Outlet in Tigard has a number of good
magazines including the July/August QEX which features an article on GNU
Radio. You may also want to read: Many will head to the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting. Many attendees will break for a social hour after the Third Tuesday meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne after the meeting See you there! |
Tuesday
Sep 16, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group AT: CANCELLED – Free Geek Meeting cancelled for want of a key holder. See you in October! |
Tuesday
Oct 21, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Living Desktop Environment-Free – Free Geek Who: Leander Harding KDE, Unity, even XFCE, are massive, complex software environments that achieve simplicity of user experience through rigid adherence to a given paradigm - and once you can write a shell script, they do remarkably little for you. We'll discuss philosophy, tools, and practical advice for simpler, more reliable, and more powerful computing without a desktop environment, surveying everything from non-annoying network profile handling to the wide world of mouse-free window management and everything in between. Leander Harding is a developer at Cloud Four and a longtime Linux user. He's been running desktop environment-free since 2007. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. See you there! Michael Dexter |
Tuesday
Nov 18, 2014
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CANCELLED: Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics – Free Geek No Advanced Topics meeting this month. Feel free to meet at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne. |
Tuesday
Dec 16, 2014
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PLUG Advanced Topics: CFPs from Announcement to Reimbursements – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Announcement Who: Michael What's His Name CFPs or Calls for Papers/Participation are something you generally are oblivious to or schedule your whole year around. A CFP is what conference organizers use to formally announce their desire for speakers at an upcoming event. They often set guidelines and requirements for the talk and the organizers of successful conferences can find themselves rejecting hundreds of proposals. Michael will analyze a number of prominent open source community CFPs and will step through every stage of a CFP that requires an extended abstract, paper and presentation. Attendees will hear repeatedly how astonishingly easy some CFPs (like PLUG's) are to respond to and in will fact have their proposals ready by the end of the talk. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
Mar 17, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics – Free Geek The March Advanced Topics will be an informal meeting at: Lucky Labrador Brew Pub 915 SE Hawthorne Boulevard Enjoy! |
Tuesday
Apr 21, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: FreeBSD Virtualization Options – Free Geek Who: Michael Dexter Learn about the latest developments in FreeBSD virtualization including EC2 and Hyper-V guest support, Xen Dom0 and DomU support and bhyve, the native FreeBSD Hypervisor. Learn about the latest developments in FreeBSD virtualization including EC2 and Hyper-V guest support, Xen Dom0 and DomU support and bhyve, the native FreeBSD Hypervisor. FreeBSD invented the modern Unix container with jail(8) in the year 2000 and today operates as an EC2 and Hyper-V guest, Xen Dom0 and DomU and now includes bhyve, the native FreeBSD Hypervisor. Michael wrote his first jail(8) management system in 2005 and has since operated NetBSD/Xen in production and was the first community user of bhyve, the FreeBSD hypervisor introduced with FreeBSD 10.0. bhyve is a modern, emulation-free hypervisor that relies on the Extended Page Table feature found in modern Intel and AMD CPUs. bhyve provides bare-metal performance for Unix virtual machines and an in some cases will in fact provide better than bare-metal performance. FreeBSD Xen Dom0 support has been many years in the making but is beginning to see the light of day. Michael is working with Xen developer Roger Pau Monné and aims to have a real-world report on the status of this unique effort. Combined, these technologies are establishing FreeBSD as an emerging first class virtualization platform with an increasing adoption by "cloud" service providers. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
May 19, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics – Free Geek PLUG Advanced Topics Who: Brian Martin Learn:
In this meeting Brian will be discussing his recent experiences using the Raspberry Pi to meet personal and business needs. Brian will demonstrate building and configuring a Raspberry Pi. He'll also demonstrate using the Raspberry Pi as a Windows remote desktop client. Afterwards, he'll demonstrate how to drink a beer at the Lucky Lab. Bio: Brian Martin is the chief consultant for Martin Consulting Services, Inc. Martin Consulting has provided system administration services in Unix, Linux and Windows systems in the Portland metro area and across the country since 1996. Brian is a frequent attendee at PLUG. His past presentations include VMWare, production grade scripting, disaster recovery experiences, Linux containers, logical volume management, and Samba 4. |
Tuesday
Oct 20, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: OpenNMS – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Who: Ken Eshelby OpenNMS is one of the most mature, scalable and flexible enterprise network management platforms in existence. This presentation will cover essential architecture, features and workflow. We will also cover new features including new massively scalable time series data store using Apache Cassandra, new measurements API, new Minion distributable collector and poller in development, and new mobile application. Ken Eshelby had been a network engineer for nearly 20 years in public service, involving development and deployment of an advanced enterprise network for the State of Oregon. I have covered technologies such as early MPLS development and deployment with Cisco, QoS, data center design and high speed scalable and redundant enterprise and service provider networks. I have maintained a focus in network management while doing engineering duties and support in a NOC and data center environment. In 2014, I joined The OpenNMS Group as a consulting and support engineer. The OpenNMS Group has maintained the OpenNMS open source project for 11 years. We sell free software. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. See you there! Michael Dexter |
Tuesday
Nov 17, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: ARM mbed and Virtualization – Free Geek Who: Galen Seitz, Tim Bruce and Michael Dexter The mbed platform provides free software libraries, hardware designs and online tools for professional rapid prototyping of products based on ARM microcontrollers. The platform includes a standards-based C/C++ SDK, a microcontroller HDK and supported development boards, an online compiler and online developer collaboration tools. https://developer.mbed.org/explore/ The illustrious embedded developer and long-time PLUG member Galen Seitz will give an overview of the mbed development environment. Virtualization Roundtable By request of long-time PLUG member Tim Bruce, we will segue to a Virtualization roundtable discussion in which Michael is happy to share his recent experiences with Windows on bhyve and the PROMOX KVM alternative to XenServer/ESXi. |
Tuesday
Dec 15, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: FreeNAS 10 CLI – Free Geek Who: Michael Dexter With over seven million downloads and hundreds of thousands of users (if not more) around the world, FreeNAS is easily the world's most popular software-defined Network Attached Storage (NAS) software. FreeNAS is based on FreeBSD and the ZFS enterprise grade open source file system. The FreeNAS graphical user interface has evolved from being PHP-based, followed by Django/JavaScript based and is now moving to an all-JavaScript, asynchronous and Websockets-based framework that allows for both graphical and command line interfaces. This hands-on demonstration will explain how the new Cisco/Vyatta-like FreeNAS CLI works for basic storage server configuration. It will also show the built-in interface debugging tools which show what is going on under the hood. Michael provides FreeNAS support with Gainframe and does way, way too much in the BSD community. PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
Jan 19, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Smarter S.M.A.R.T. and related storage challenges – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Who: Roundtable discussion, moderated by Brian Martin and Michael Dexter We are addicted to storage devices like hard and solid state disks. Modern computing begins with storage and could survive quite some time without the computing part, as demonstrated by past storage devices like the Rosetta Stone for which we struggle to decode. This means HDD's and SSD's are reliable, right? Alas, they are not. In fact the situation is somewhat terrifying. File systems have made significant progress in the last decade but remarkably, there are still significant issues surrounding the devices they inhabit. Storage devices are inconsistent, to put it politely, about notifying the user of existing, potential and impending problems. Built-in, standard-ish reporting mechanisms like S.M.A.R.T. exist but pose as many challenges as they address. Some storage "health" monitoring data is straight-forward, some is not: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tDacjrSCeq4 Bring your storage-related questions, war stories and gadgets! Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
Feb 16, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Linux as a security camera monitoring platform – Free Geek Who: Kevin Kaelar Setting up a camera in Linux is relatively easy. With any luck, you plug in the USB cable and it "just works". But what if you need ten cameras? What if you need to store increasingly large amounts of footage for liability purposes? What if you need to be able to access the realtime feed from any (or all) of those cameras from anywhere in the world? What if you need fine-grained motion detection for some of the cameras, scheduled recording capabilities for others at certain times of day, and provide varying levels of access to multiple users? This problem set is normally solved in a business environment by purchasing expensive (and frequently proprietary) security camera systems at a significant cost. However, it's possible to accomplish all of these things with a Linux-based application called ZoneMinder. During this talk, you'll be walked through the process of setting up a fully featured security camera and monitoring system, and will have the opportunity to learn about and/or discuss some of the supportive tech such as an Apache proxy, firewall and router configuration, and pruning and backing up video archives. About Kevin System administrator, game designer, software developer, open source contributor, Soylent drinker, wood carver, small electronics prototyper, blacksmith, poet, machinist, musician, and martial artist. Currently working as a full time web application developer for a music publishing company, Kevin spends most of his spare time babysitting a 3d printer and doing fun (and occasionally strange) things with Arduino at his startup in the Pearl District of Portland, Oregon. |
Tuesday
Apr 19, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Enduring Communities Roundtable – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Announcement Who: Moderator Michael Dexter, PLUG Volunteer Why do some user groups endure for decades while others do not? What organizational structures and personalities are needed to maintain interest, attendance and participation? Share your experiences on why the groups you have been involved with have or have not survived. Was it a Y2K preparedness group that served its purpose? Did group leadership not successfully transfer between generations? Beyond organizing the last 100 or so PLUG speakers, Michael has been involved in student and neighborhood government, plus the Oregon Latvian Society for nearly 30 years. During this time he has seen the brightest and darkest moments of volunteer organizations. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
May 17, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Installerfest! – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Who: Roundtable Discussion Not installations, installers. The things that install operating systems to persistent and bootable storage. Many of us have written our own over the years and at a bare minimum, Michael can show what he's been doing with his virtualization things. On deck: OpenBSD, FreeBSD, (thing you bring) Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
Jun 21, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Informal meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne See you next month! |
Tuesday
Jul 19, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Who: Moderator Michael Dexter, PLUG Volunteer What's in a mirror? If you've spent any time GNU/Linux distro hopping or testing virtualization strategies, you have probably spent a non-trivial amount of time in the "nearest" download mirror. Such mirrors vary in speed, quality and navigability. The burden for upholding quality in each of these respects falls both on the often-volunteer mirror maintainers and the often-volunteer project maintainers. Failure from a mirror's perspective is obvious: You can't access the materials you want to download or what you download is corrupt. In the case of the downloads themselves, THIS: mirror.org/releases/amd64/20160704/livedvd-amd64-multilib-20160704.iso I was cleaning up my local mirror and came across this path and installer ISO and... HAVE NO IDEA WHAT OS IT IS. This roundtable will discuss the good, the bad and the ugly of such mirroring and what to do about it, ideally resulting in a draft proposal for a conventions that projects and mirrors could follow. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. See you there! |
Tuesday
Aug 16, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: INFORMAL MEETING – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Informal meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne for those who need to get out of the house. Enjoy! |
Tuesday
Oct 18, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: CloudStack – Free Geek Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Who: Kimberly M. This presentation is a report from an evaluation of using an open source cloud environment in a small or home office situation. The project compared Apache CloudStack with OpenStack, plus the XenServer and KVM hypervisors. We will walk through the deployment of CloudStack and KVM and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the various design choices. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 915 SE Hawthorne Blvd. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. See you there! |
Tuesday
Oct 15, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Clear Linux OS – Intel Hawthorne Farms Building 3 (HF3), Auditorium Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics Meeting Who: The Clear Linux Team Intel's Clear Linux OS team will talk about their operating system! Many will head to the Orenco Taphouse, 1198 NE Orenco Station Pkwy, Hillsboro Ride shares available PLUG is open to everyone but does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Tuesday
Nov 19, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: System Stacks Usecases and Swupd Client – Intel Hawthorne Farms Building 3 (HF3), Auditorium PLUG Advanced Topics Is Back! Who: Beth Dean and Otavio Pontes Beth Dean will present a System Stacks Usecases demo, and Otavio Pontes will talk about Swupd Client, the Clear Linux OS core update system. It will be at the Hawthorne Farms auditorium at 6:30pm. Afters will be at Orenco Taphouse, 1198 NE Orenco Station Pkwy, Hillsboro. PLUG is open to everyone but does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. See you there! |
Wednesday
Sep 17, 2008
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PLUG/Perl: Indexing CPAN – Jax Bar (CLOSED) Speaker: brian d foy Topic: Indexing CPAN BackPAN is the historical archive of the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network, where most Perl modules live. Going back to 1993, BackPAN has about 100,000 distributions, taking up 12 GB of space. So far, there has not been a comprehensive index of all of these distributions. I'm working on a project to go through each distribution, record as much information as I can, and store that in a way that other people can ask questions. The big goal now is to take any Perl module file you have installed locally and query my index to determine exactly which distribution it came from, when it was released, what other files came with it, and at the time of it's release what its dependency list was. My talk is a demonstration of what I have so far, which is still in the data collection phase. I have an indexer that knows how to go through distributions and record information, and can do some with pluggable components for each portion of the work. In my talk, I'll demonstrate the current indexer and talk a little bit about the tools and techniques I use. There's plenty of cool Perl things going on, and I'm sure some of the Linux people will have valuable comments about software indexing. |
Wednesday
Nov 19, 2008
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PLUG: Linux Advanced Topics Talk -- OpenWrt, it's not just for Linksys Routers anymore – Jax Bar (CLOSED) Speaker: Russell Senior Topic: OpenWrt - It's not just for Linksys Routers anymore Russell has been fiddling around with OpenWrt for a couple years, on various platforms. He'll give a step-by-step on how to build OpenWrt for your device, various ways to get it onto your device, and how configuration is handled in the OpenWrt way. Normal meeting rules apply. |
Wednesday
Dec 17, 2008
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[Cancelled] PLUG Advanced Topics: FreeTUIT, Codeless GUI Programming – Jax Bar (CLOSED) Jax Bar 826 SW 2nd Ave Speaker: Eric Wilhelm Codeless GUI Programming A Declarative Syntax Layer for Desktop Graphical User Interfaces This will be the world premiere of a game-changing advancement in the development of desktop graphical user interfaces (GUIs). FreeTUIT removes the verbosity, tedium, and confusion from GUI development and provides a unified syntax for widget layout and configuration which supports good software design practice without getting in the way of rapid application development. FreeTUIT is a syntax and runtime for concisely declaring the layout and configuration of GUI widgets (such as forms, toolbars, buttons, and dialogs). The freetuit interpreter drives a unified object layer which is accessible from event callbacks. This takes you from a blank page to a static demo of the layout with zero setup and allows desktop applications to be developed and deployed faster than web applications by simply removing the HTML, CSS, XML, HTTP, Javascript, Database, Network, and User Agent components. |
Wednesday
Jan 21, 2009
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PLUG Advanced Topics: FreeTUIT - Codeless GUI Programming – Jax Bar (CLOSED) Speaker: Eric Wilhelm Codeless GUI Programming A Declarative Syntax Layer for Desktop Graphical User Interfaces This will be the world premiere of a game-changing advancement in the development of desktop graphical user interfaces (GUIs). FreeTUIT removes the verbosity, tedium, and confusion from GUI development and provides a unified syntax for widget layout and configuration which supports good software design practice without getting in the way of rapid application development. FreeTUIT is a syntax and runtime for concisely declaring the layout and configuration of GUI widgets (such as forms, toolbars, buttons, and dialogs). The freetuit interpreter drives a unified object layer which is accessible from event callbacks. This takes you from a blank page to a static demo of the layout with zero setup and allows desktop applications to be developed and deployed faster than web applications by simply removing the HTML, CSS, XML, HTTP, Javascript, Database, Network, and User Agent components. |
Thursday
Nov 2, 2023
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting – Lucky Lab Brew Pub Our regular venue is unavailable this month, so we're going to have an informal UnPLUG, just hang out and chit chat on and off-topic. You are welcome! |
Tuesday
Jun 18, 2013
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PLUG Advanced Topics: Social Event at the Lucky Lab – Lucky Labrador Brew Pub The Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics meeting For want of a venue keyholder, we will congregate at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne for the topics of your choice. |
Tuesday
Jan 20, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Informal Meeting – Lucky Labrador Brew Pub For want of a response to the CFP, the PLUG meeting will be an informal meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne for those who need to get out of the house. |
Tuesday
Feb 17, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics: Informal Meeting – Lucky Labrador Brew Pub For want of a response to the CFP, the PLUG meeting will be an informal meeting at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne for those who need to get out of the house. Enjoy! |
Tuesday
Mar 15, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group AT: INFORMAL Meeting at the Lucky Lab – Lucky Labrador Brew Pub Portland Linux/Unix Group Advanced Topics No organizer or speaker this month! You are welcome to congregate and hack at the Lucky Lab on Hawthorne. Enjoy! |
Thursday
Feb 1
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting: New Year Show and Tell – Oregon Latvian Community Center Who: Ted, Michael, YOU... Ted: Bandwidth monitoring OpenWRT and DD-WRT routers with MRTG Michael: Managing Windows from FreeBSD Environments You: What have you been working on this last few months? Rules and Requests: Masks are encouraged but not required. CCC in Germany sent a LOT of people home with COVID-19. 19 as in 2019 and please people, it's not something we want to hang on to. PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings Do not leave valuables in your car |
Thursday
Mar 7
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting: A Network Relay through a Cloud Instance; and Retro Linux Tape Recovery Show and Tell – Oregon Latvian Community Center Who: Russell Senior The first part is going to be a description of how I relay network connections from the Internet to my low-volume home-based email server to evade potential ISP blockages. The second part is going to be a show and tell about my resurrection of an ancient Linux version in order to recover data from Quarter Inch Cartridge tapes and ancillary topics. It will also include a short demo of my MS-DOS 5.0 environment also (resurrected from tape) the month before I installed Linux for the first time in December 1992. About Russell: I am a person for whom the Year of the Linux Desktop started in 1992 and has continued annually, uninterrupted. I worked for a couple decades in scientific data management and analysis. Since 2005, I have been involved with the Personal Telco Project, a volunteer-based 501c3 non-profit trying to unscrew telecommunications policy in the Portland metropolitan area. I did a short stint in data management for an Oceanographic organization when it was housed at OH&SU. I also volunteer at Portland State Aerospace Society working on their OreSat program. My name, misspelled in glorious circuit board silkscreen, has literally been in orbit for most of the last 2 years. I have done a bunch of PLUG talks over the years. Rules and Requests: Masks are encouraged but not required. PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings Do not leave valuables in your car |
Thursday
Apr 4
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting: 30th Anniversary Meeting – Oregon Latvian Community Center The Portland Linux/Unix Group has been meeting since 30 years ago this month. Please join us for a celebratory gathering to recognize our continuing longevity. It isn't possible to say right now who the speaker will be, but we'll work something out. More important than who is speaking is getting together to recognize the community of helpers that we are. Whether you are an old timer, there at the beginning, or someone who just started attending recently, or someone who has never attended before, we welcome you and hope that you can join us. Date: March 24th, 1994 Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.help Subject: Linux Users Group!!! There is a Linux users group forming in Portland Oregon, if you are interested, email me at: ... our first meeting date has not been set, but will be in April sometime. Have Fun, Sean |
Thursday
Sep 5
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting: Ben Koenig on a Linux Changelog – Oregon Latvian Community Center Ever wondered how many package updates were released for your favorite distro in the past month? Or how many times you have had to upgrade Firefox? The Linux Changelog Project is an attempt to present statistics for the development and maintenance of Linux Distributions based on publicly available changelog data. By creating a distro-agnostic view of all changelog updates for a given project, we can see how the size and activity of a given distribution compares to its peers. At the moment only Fedora and Slackware are supported, but over time more distributions will be added. The end goal is to provide a web interface that will allow people to search for and browse the millions of package updates across all major Linux distributions. As someone who is largely self-taught in the world of GNU/Linux, projects like this are how I learn about the Linux ecosystem and practice skills that I apply to my career in IT support. While my experience goes all the way back to the dark days of HAL I'm still surprised by what I find hiding in the various corners of the Linux world. Working with the changelog formats of different distributions has challenged hat I thought I knew, and I hope other users (new and old) will find it interesting as well. |
Thursday
Apr 7, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Canceled to attend Richard Stallman talk – Portland State University - Native American Student and Community Center |
Thursday
Sep 4, 2008
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PLUG: Building Open Source Communities – Portland State University Engineering Building Gabrielle Roth and Selena Deckelmann will be discussing ways to build and maintain Open Source Communities. Their emphasis will be in building real in-person communities rather than virtual on-line type communities. Gabriell and Selena recently presented "Running a Successful User Group" at OSCON 2008, see notes at http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/30268 The meeting will be in Room FAB 86-01 of The Fariborz Maseeh College of Engineering and Computer Science Building at Portland State University. This building, nicknamed The New Engineering Building, is on SW 4th across from SW College Street. See location H-10 on the map at http://pdxLinux.org/campus_map.jpg |
Thursday
Nov 6, 2008
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PLUG: LANs, iptables, routing, and more – Portland State University Engineering Building Kirk Harr will speak on "LANs, iptables, routing, and more" |
Thursday
Feb 5, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Intro to Digital Forensics – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09
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: |
Thursday
Mar 5, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Fun with blktrace and seekwatcher – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09
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. |
Thursday
Apr 2, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Presentation by Bart Massey – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09
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. |
Thursday
May 7, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Displaying HD Video Content with a PC – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09
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. |
Thursday
Jun 4, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: What is Linux Fund? – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 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. |
Thursday
Jul 2, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Aug 6, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Virtualize vs Containerize – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Sep 3, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Crash Reporting: Mozilla's Open Source Solution – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Oct 1, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: BSD Virtualization – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 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 |
Thursday
Nov 5, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Unit Test Your Database! – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Jan 7, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Drupal! What is it good for? – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Feb 4, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: A Talk by Jeri Ellsworth (SICK: RESCHEDULING!) – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 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. |
Thursday
Mar 4, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: A Talk by Jeri Ellsworth – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 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/ |
Thursday
Apr 1, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
May 6, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: How Linux Containers fit your cloud – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Jun 3, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Puppet - An Introduction – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Jul 1, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Source Car Entertainment – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Aug 5, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Server Sky - Data Centers in Orbit – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 PRESENTATION Server Sky - Data Centers in Orbit |
Thursday
Sep 2, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Berkley DB – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 PRESENTATION
Director Product Management - Berkeley DB |
Thursday
Nov 4, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Presentation by Allan Foster of Forge Rock – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 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. |
Thursday
Dec 2, 2010
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Source Desktop Publishing with Scribus – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Jan 6, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Mini-presentations on variety of topics – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Feb 3, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: What is Open? – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Mar 3, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Free Content and the Data Revolution – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 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. |
Thursday
May 5, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Comments on the IPv6 Transition – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Jun 2, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Introduction to OpenEMR – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Jul 7, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Aug 4, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: The Use of Open Source Software in State Agencies – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Sep 1, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Oct 6, 2011
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Arch Linux – Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09 |
Thursday
Dec 4, 2008
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Some Random Thoughts on Open Source Philosophy – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) |
Thursday
Jan 8, 2009
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB)
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, PLUG for Education, etc. 7:30 - 8:30 Presentation See above 9:00 - ... Beer Jax Bar And Restaurant 826 SW 2nd Avenue Portland |
Thursday
Aug 3, 2017
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: An Introduction to Data Protection – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Michael "you break it you bought it" Dexter You probably have a good sense of data protection in the sense of "backups" but alas, there is more to it. This talk will cover ten key aspects of Data Protection and discuss open source technologies that address them. Is your data...
Bring your questions and experiences for a livid^H^H^H^H^H vivid and vibrant discussion. Bonus: Discussion about the future of PLUG Advanced Topics and other PLUG housekeeping, planning and fun! Super bonus: Michael will not be here in September and see Bonus one. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Dec 7, 2017
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: OAuth 2.0 Simplified – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Aaron Parecki The OAuth 2.0 authorization framework has become the industry standard in providing secure access to web APIs. OAuth allows users to grant external applications access to their data, such as profile data, photos, and email, without compromising security. However, OAuth can be intimidating when first starting out. In this talk, Aaron Parecki will break down the various OAuth workflows and provide a simplified overview of the framework, highlighting a few typical use cases. About Aaron Aaron Parecki is the editor of the W3C Webmention and Micropub specifications, and maintains oauth.net. He is the co-founder of IndieWebCamp, a yearly worldwide conference on data ownership and online identity. He has spoken at conferences around the world about OAuth, data ownership, quantified self, and even explained why R is a vowel. You can find more about his work at aaronpk.com. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jan 4, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Fedora Atomic Host: Your Next Linux – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Josh Berkus Fedora Atomic Host: Your Next Linux Our current model of RPM-and-config-management for Linux systems has done well for us over the last decade and more, but is starting to show its age. Come learn about Atomic Host, which is a new model for managing software and maintenance for large clouds of hosts. Josh Berkus of Red Hat will explain the Atomic Host "ostree" model for binary updates, and how that ties in with container deployments of applications. He will demo deploying and updating a cluster of Atomic Hosts running OpenShift, and answer questions about this architecture. He'll then speculate about what the future could hold, in the form of modularity, Flatpaks, and more. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Feb 1, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Municipal Broadband in Portland – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Russell Senior How to get a Municipal Broadband network in the City of Portland As many of you know, Russell has been kind of passionate about building an open-access Internet infrastructure in Portland for the last decade or more. No privately owned network would voluntarily allow open-access, and hasn't since the DSL days (when they were required to), and the Feds, namely the FCC has been steadfast in its refusal to enforce line-sharing (essentially the same thing as open access) on infrastructure built since 1996. Many of you may have heard about the FCC action in December rescinding the relatively new Title II regulation of ISPs and the Network Neutrality rules that went with it. With the consciousness raising this event has provided, there is a new window of opportunity from the groundswell of interest to create pressure on our political systems, namely City Council in Portland OR, failing that, an initiative petition to provide a local solution. Russell will describe the problem and what a solution would look like, where the user ends up in the driver seat. Bring your Net Neutrality questions! Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Mar 1, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Meltdown and Spectre Vulnerabilities – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Steve Dum Seemingly simultaneously multiple people discovered these vulnerabilities that exploit CPU data cache timing to cause protected information to be leaked. I'll start with a review of modern CPU design features like parallel execution, out of order execution, speculative execution, branch prediction,cache access and side channels leading up to the 3 flaws, called Meltdown and Spectre. Including a simple understandable example of the flaws, and show an actual Proof of Concept. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Apr 5, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Upgrading your business phone system with Asterisk – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Ted Mittelstaedt Most medium to larger businesses use central PBX phone systems to save money on telephone lines. Over the last decade the business PBX has gradually evolved towards Voice over IP hardware and away from traditional digital phones. Proprietary VoIP PBX systems such as Panasonic, Cisco and Mitel are available but costly. This presentation will cover how companies can take advantage of open standards such as SIP and LDAP and software such as Asterisk to have an inexpensive PBX that has features of the large, expensive and proprietary systems. An Asterisk system will be demonstrated and used as a sample system for the presentation. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
May 3, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: UnPLUG and more! – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: You! Our speaker from the OSI had to leave Portland earlier than expected leaving us with an UnPLUG open discussion. There is a chance I will bring my favorite computer books. You can too! Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jun 7, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: YaCy Distributed/P2P Search Engine – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Daniel Hedlund YaCy (https://yacy.net/) is an open-source distributed/peer-to-peer search engine, where no central server is in control of the search index or ranking of results. It can be used to search the Internet through peer-to-peer nodes, or set up to search your own intranet. Daniel will provide an introductory overview of the architecture walk through setting it up for several use cases. He will also give an overview of what is coming with YaCy Grid, a second-generation implementation of YaCy. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jul 5, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: OpenStreetMap – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Keith Dechant More details to come. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Aug 2, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Combating global warming with open source and IoT – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Robin Haberman To fight global warming on the local level requires a change in thinking. We need to consider how new systems can be easily deployed and used by local groups. Supported by regional groups of academics, scientists, citizen scientists, journalists, environmental hackers, communities from the DIY and Maker movements. Systems that can aid local populations in their understanding of environmental and climate changes and help them deal with those changes. Our systems are aimed at the area that is the difference between today's weather and long-term climate changes ahead. These systems are designed to be the “last mile” of climate change monitoring, allowing local communities around the world to monitor their climate and take steps to mitigate changes. The systems will be owned and run by these communities with limited outside technical support, and can either stand alone or be tied together into an ad-hoc network similar to a small network of cellphone towers. Using our system to ask three questions: What is happening to our climate and environment? What does it mean? And what can we do about it? The hard data collected from the system, leaders in communities can begin planning how they will adapt and stay in place in their decision-making process. The GMIBS-Project will design, develop, and produce low-cost systems to aid local groups efforts to monitor and mitigate climate change. By this we hope to foster an ecosystem of users, developers, contributors, and competitors in an open global marketplace for climate change intelligent aid tool systems. About Robin Robin’s current work is on development of an Early Warring System for local climate changes. Graduated from a private high school housed at Reed College and staffed by students from Reed. His academic training includes several degrees with an international focus as well as information management and telecommunications (BS/AA and 3 Cert’s) Along with over 10,000 hours of professional training in intelligent networks and information storage, which gave him the skills and capabilities needed to work for two multinational and three foreign corporations. Other careers have been: Academic research for non-profit R&D organization; musical bands and llght show logistics. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Sep 6, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Building Mobile Apps with Flutter – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Randal L. Schwartz Flutter makes it easy and fast to build beautiful mobile apps. Flutter is a new mobile app SDK to help developers and designers build modern mobile apps for iOS and Android. Deliver features faster: refresh times so fast, you can "paint" your app to life on hardware, emulators, and simulators. Craft beautiful UIs: dDelight your users and make your brand stand out with rich motion, smooth scrolling, and beautiful customizable components. Used by Google: Flutter is used by Google and others in production, works with Firebase and other mobile app SDKs, and is open source. Flutter's hot reload helps you quickly and easily experiment, build UIs, add features, and fix bug faster. Experience sub-second reload times, without losing state, on emulators, simulators, and hardware for iOS and Android. Delight your users with Flutter's built-in beautiful Material Design and Cupertino (iOS-flavor) widgets, rich motion APIs, smooth natural scrolling, and platform awareness. Easily compose your UI with Flutter's modern reactive framework and rich set of platform, layout, and foundation widgets. Solve your tough UI challenges with powerful and flexible APIs for 2D, animation, gestures, effects, and more. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Oct 4, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Source and POSIX Environments for Windows – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Michael Dexter Windows has a hard-earned reputation for appalling security and reliability but, better late than never, has matured into a relatively stable and secure desktop and server problem. Windows can run many popular open source desktop applications and has an incredibly-long history of on-again and off-again supporting Unix/POSIX environments such as Interix/SFU and Cygwin, and now ships with Linux emulation. These tools vary wildly in their depth of frustration to Unix users but do provide a gateway to some extremely-interesting yet intentionally-vague open source opportunities that will be demonstrated. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Nov 1, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Carnivorous plants and other technologies – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Featuring Special Guest Chris Fisher of Linux Action Show and Tech Snap! Who: J. Hart New York-based PLUG member J. Hart is passing through town and will discuss his adventures with carnivorous plants and other technologies. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Dec 6, 2018
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid web application development with Angular – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Nathan Brenner Rapid web application development with Angular: Catch a glimpse of what a full stack web application looks like that is built with open source resources like Angular, NgRx, GraphQL, and AWS Amplify. A lot has changed since the version of Javascript changed in 2015. Open source client side frameworks have dramatically changed to provide opportunities to build large client side applications that are performant while also cloud infrastructure has made scaling javascript possible with the availability of powerful tools without investing in expensive servers. About the Speaker Nathan Brenner is a self-taught full slack web application engineer, currently as a contractor at Nike. He’s worked on a range of small to enterprise level projects over the past 4 years, covering grounds such as but not limited to Angular and React on the client side. Prior to working in software, he worked in public education for several years and has degrees from the University of Nevada, Reno and Portland State University. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jan 3, 2019
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CANCELLED: Portland Linux/Unix Group – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 PSU is not in session yet and we have no guarantee of a room. See you at the Clinic or in February! |
Thursday
Feb 7, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: PGP Key Storage with a Yubikey 4 – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Russell Senior This presentation will walk through the use of a Yubikey 4 to hold an RSA PGP private key. Public key encryption requires protection of the private key. If control of the private key is lost, all reasoning about signatures and encryption is compromised. Storing private keys on a hard disk and processed by the PC makes the private key vulnerable to compromise. A Yubikey promises to key your private key secret. There will also be a digression during the presentation into so-called true Random Number Generators, e.g. ChaosKey and InfiniteNoise. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Mar 7, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Coreboot! – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Joshua Elsasser Coreboot is an open-source, flexible firmware platform for x86 and other architectures. Primarily intended to be used by hardware OEMs, it has also been ported by volunteers to a small number of existing motherboards. This presentation will walk through the process of building and flashing Coreboot on a Thinkpad x220. Joshua Elsasser is a sysadmin, software developer, and esoteric software enthusiast. He is happiest when hacking on software five layers down from wherever everyone else is working. Organizers's notes: This is a PLUG talk I have been hoping to host for several years now. Thank you Joshua! Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Apr 4, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Software Quality Engineering – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Heather Wilcox There is no magic bullet for quality. Nor is there a right tool, script, or any amount of automation that can replace actual thought and effort. Building quality in requires that you first understand what it is. This talk will focus first on defining quality, then we will move to strategies for building the goodness in, and finally ways to test to ensure that both you and your "customers" are getting what they want. About Heather Heather Wilcox has spent 24 years working and learning in the software industry, choosing to focus primarily on start-up and small companies. As a result, she has had a broad range of job descriptions which include, but are not limited to: Tech Support Engineer, IS Manager, Technical Writer, QA Engineer, QA Manager, and Configuration Management Engineer. This has given Heather a wide range of experiences to draw from in her current roles as a Senior Quality Assurance engineer and Scrum Master. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
May 2, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: UnPLUG! – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: You! UnPLUG! Quick talks and open discussion. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jun 6, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Why Packets Die – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Tony Bourke Why do packets die? What happens inside data center switches and WAN routers that cause packets to die? In this talk, Tony does packet walks explaining in simple, relatable terms what happens when a packet leaves a server and doesn't make it's destination. Network congestion and its affects on buffering, queuing, QoS, rate limiting and shaping are all topics covered. Topics that can be scary to server administrators, but Tony breaks them down to very simple components. Also discussions on why protocol overhead doesn't much matter, and why jumbo frames don't matter to the network for performance are discussed. Tony Bourke is a networking instructor teaching primarily Cisco and related technologies. He is also a certified skydiving instructor and parachute rigger. He lives in Portland, Oregon but can be found all over the world teaching or skydiving (or both). Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Aug 1, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Introduction to Ansible – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Larry Brigman Automation and configuration management is hard when the tools you use don't provide the basics. Ansible is built from the ground up to always handle and check the error conditions. Come learn a little Ansible and see how you can start on your path toward using Infrastructure as Code. About Larry First Experience with computers was a TRS-80 with a cassette tape. Since then used or developed on everything from microcontrollers to mainframes. Currently developing on for Linux using Ansible and OpenShift. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Sep 5, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Sourcing a Perl module – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: Andrew Hewus Fresh While I will explain about what DBIx::Class::Events does and how it works as well as some of the underlying technologies it builds on, this talk is primarily about open source contributions being driven by the folks in a company who care about them and how it is up to those people to provide the resources and knowledge to everyone else in order to create an open source culture in the workplace. As far as I know, no request to open source something has ever been denied by my employer, and while the company has always had the same "go for it" attitude, the folks writing code are only just starting to gain momentum releasing things publicly. I'll talk about showing other folks in the company the benefits of sharing code internally, how that exposed the benefits of open-source in general, and how we as a company progressed to getting DBIx::Class::Events onto the CPAN. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Oct 3, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Contending With Our Culture of Discouragement – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Who: You! The Free Software/Open Source community appears to be at a crossroads. A brave woman declared that "enough is enough" with the disturbing statements of a pivotal figure in the community and it rightfully cost that figure a number of prominent positions. Remarkably, she wasn't the first woman to challenge a foundation leader this year and help usher them to the door. Responses to such confrontations have ranged from false narratives to the proposal of morality-enforcing licenses for software. One theme however, is the chilling effect that disturbing, and at times unlawful behavior in the community causes, and the efforts to content with it. Why participate in communities with these issues? This passive discouragement is often combined with direct discouragement and countless forms of divisiveness. Yet we press on, and work to resolve these bugs, one by one. This meeting will be an open forum to share your experiences with discouragement in the free software/open source community. Trolls need not attend but will be educated by a panel of experts if they do. ATTENTION! Thanks to a new security policy, attendees will need to enter through the 1900 SW 4th entrance by 8PM, just North of the 1930 SW 4th entrance adjacent to Hawaiian Express, formerly Taco Del Mar: https://www.google.com/maps/place/1900+SW+4th+Ave,+Portland,+OR Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Ride shares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Nov 7, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Glass Beatstation – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Athan Spathas Glass Beatstation: An open source mobile and modular musical interface for Linux machines and musicians that don’t know how to use Linux As a self-taught/amateur programmer, I was able to use open source programs to start building the versatile music workstation I’ve long dreamed of. The fact that I have been able to get this project functional to any degree is a great credit to the FLO (Free/Libre/Open Source) community. In the process I’ve learned about many of the benefits and learning curves of FLO hardware and software. I primarily used Python, Open-Stage-Control, Sooperlooper, Ardour, Puredata and the Kxstudio repositories, and have iterated an extra portable version of the project on raspberry pi. I will share the perspectives I have gained in the process how I was able to receive AND share knowledge with Linux users both new and experienced alike. Because of this, I’ve learned much about bridging the gap between those people already familiar with Linux/FLO technology, and those who aren’t familiar – yet. Athan Spathas teaches robotics to kids and supports open source software however he can: one is as likely to find him performing on his linux based portable studio as much as find him performing on it, doing demos, or educating others about the benefits of open source technology. ATTENTION! Thanks to a new security policy, attendees will need to enter through the 1900 SW 4th entrance by 8PM, just North of the 1930 SW 4th entrance adjacent to Hawaiian Express, formerly Taco Del Mar: https://www.google.com/maps/place/1900+SW+4th+Ave,+Portland,+OR Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Ride shares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Dec 5, 2019
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Do you still use ASCII? – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Steve Dum A look at the journey from ASCII to UTF-8. I'll discuss the ramifications of the results of this journey for users and highlight cautions for developers. We have gone from the simple, a character is a byte, to a character may be tens of bytes, and worse monospace characters are not always the same width when displayed. This is a overview of features every GNU/Linux user should be aware of. It also highlights some issues programmers and sysadmins will face. I am a UTF-8 neophyte trying to fix a broken program that now needs to use UTF-8. I've spent decades porting large programs to new environments. Now I'm planning on integrating a large library to a small program. ATTENTION! Thanks to a new security policy, attendees will need to enter through the 1900 SW 4th entrance by 8PM, just North of the 1930 SW 4th entrance adjacent to Hawaiian Express, formerly Taco Del Mar: https://www.google.com/maps/place/1900+SW+4th+Ave,+Portland,+OR Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Ride shares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jan 2, 2020
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Reading wireless temperature sensors with RTL-SDR and rtl_433 – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Russell Senior
What: Reading wireless temperature sensors with RTL-SDR and rtl_433 Russell has been measuring an array of temperature sensors in and around his house since October-ish 2011, primarily Dallas Semiconductor DS18B20 one-wire sensors (previously talk: 2013-06-06 Hacking on the Beagle Bone Black). For years, he's had a few Oregon Scientific wireless temperature sensors outside, but no way to log the temperatures for posterity. About a year ago, in early December 2018, he discovered a project called rtl_433 that uses a software defined radio to receive and decode the signals coming from these and similar sensors. so that they can be logged. This talk will describe a few of the things that are possible with rtl_433 and what Russell does and doesn't do with the data. About Russell: Russell has been a Linux user since 1992. He worked for a few decades doing data management, programming, and analysis for a small scientific consulting firm. Since 2005 he has been deeply involved in the Personal Telco Project and trying to bring about telecommunications in the users interests, while also hacking on router firmware. For two years, he's been involved in an active effort to bring publicly-owned fiber infrastructure to the Portland metro area (in furtherance of the Personal Telco goal). He has a possibly unnatural love for serial consoles and RS-232, but is too smitten to be ashamed. He describes himself as self-under-employed. Will work on Linux'y things for money. Will work on Science'y/measurement'y things for money, as long as Linux is or can be involved somehow. He's very interested in trying to solve your telemetry problems with off-the-shelf wifi equipment and some elbow grease, if you've got some. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Ride shares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Feb 6, 2020
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Linux, Open Source Silicon, and Crowdfunding – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Josh Lifton, Co-founder & President, Crowd Supply A guided tour through 7+ years of adventures in crowdfunding open hardware, from the Novena and Librem laptops to high-end software-defined radios and pentesting tools. What does it mean for hardware to be open? How does it relate to software and Linux in particular? Can we replicate the successes and avoid the pitfalls Linux has been through? Where does open silicon fit into all this? Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Ride shares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Mar 5, 2020
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: UnPLUG: Home Lab Show and Tell! – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: You! Many PLUG members have home labs and a case could be made for every PLUG member having a home lab, however humble. Fortunately, recent hardware advances such as hardware-assisted virtualization have made a virtualized home lab accessible to users of every budget. Please bring your favorite home lab stories and hardware for whatever presentation you are comfortable with. We are guaranteed to have an abundance of information and stories! Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Ride shares to the Lucky Lab available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Oct 3
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting:OpenWISP, an Open Source Network Management System for OpenWrt – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 There are many commercial wifi access point (AP) controller setups, ie a single management interface to control multiple APs. Until recently there wasn't a FLOSS method of doing this. OpenWISP (https://openwisp.org/) is a modular and programmable Open Source Network Management System for OpenWrt. In this presentation we will go over the simple installation and setup process, including connection to multiple OpenWrt access points. Bio: Eldo Varghese is a constant nomad that has settled in Portland as of 3 years ago. Recently turned 40 and looking for more community in his old age. Currently works in an SRE/Devops role at a small non-profit academic journal (https://plos.org). Involved in Linux community in some fashion since 2007, and have used OpenWrt for the past 15 years. |
Thursday
Nov 7
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Monthly Meeting: an OpenWrt Clinic – Portland State University Fourth Avenue Building (FAB) Room FAB 86-01 A quick overview of the build system for OpenWrt on supported devices, followed by a demonstration of installation and configuration. If you have a device you'd like help installing OpenWrt on, bring it along, perhaps we'll have time to address it. At a minimum there will be a Watchguard Firebox M300. Russell Senior has been building OpenWrt from source for a variety of purposes since about 2006 and has considerable knowledge about the ins and outs and what-have-yous. For background, you can watch a presentation he gave at Open Source Bridge in 2014: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOsRAxToyiM (some of the information in that talk from a decade ago is stale, so beware) |
Thursday
Dec 6, 2012
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Bootstrapping an open source project community – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Michael Dexter will talk about bootstrapping the bhyve hypervisor community: How to take a project from a collection of experimental code in a repository to a fledgling community. BHyVe is a legacy-free type 2 Hypervisor for FreeBSD and its derivatives such as PC-BSD and NanoBSD General discussion to follow |
Thursday
Jan 3, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Linux in Schools project: Past, Present, and Future – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Eric Harrison has over 15 years experience with Linux in primary and secondary education environments (Kindergarten through High School). Topics will include designing, building, and maintaining your own Linux distributions (K12LTSP & Edubuntu), infrastructure (clustering, virtualization, web filtering, etc), large scale Asterisk telephony deployments, IPv6, and more. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting. |
Thursday
Apr 4, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Mozilla Socorro Open Source crash reporting tool – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Mozilla Socorro: an Open Source crash reporting system evolves. Socorro collects and analyzes three million crash reports a day employing PostgreSQL, HBase, Hadoop, and ElasticSearch glued together with Python. Socorro's data analysis drives the stability and development priorities of Firefox. Five years ago, Socorro was a system that ran on three machines and was tended by just one person. In 2013, it has evolved to become a distributed system running on 120 machines and serving hundreds of terabytes of data. Meanwhile, companies all over the world are adopting Socorro for crash reporting. This talk, an update of one given several years ago, will track the evolution of Socorro and its future in the upcoming world of FirefoxOS. K Lars Lohn is the Herd Patriarch of the Mozilla WebTools Group. As the author and curator of the Mozilla Socorro Crash Reporting System, Lars has driven its evolution. Formerly with the OSUOSL, Lars telecommutes for Mozilla from a farm near Corvallis. While preferring Python, PostgreSQL and Harleys, Lars is versed in C++, MySQL and Subarus. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting |
Thursday
May 2, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Confronting Depression – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building What is up with Linux guys buying MacBook Pros? This is depressing-- how can you put a penguin sticker next to your Apple logo? In the wake of tragic national and local losses in the open source community to depression, Yshai Boussi of Portland Family Counseling will discuss all aspects of depression including signs and symptoms, origins, solutions and treatments, how to help others if you're concerned that they may be depressed. Yshai has family in the tech community and insights into why we may have a different relationship with depression than most communities. Yshai has been practicing as a psychotherapist since 2003. Over the years, he has worked with many different types of individuals, couples, adolescents and families. He has seen how depression affects individuals but also friends and family as well. He is a Licensed Professional Counselor operating a private practice with his wife called Portland Family Counseling. Our practice is in NW Portland. http://portlandfamilycounseling.com Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting |
Thursday
Jun 6, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting: Hacking on the Beagle Bone Black – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Hacking on the new Beagle Bone Black Description: Russell recently spent some time working on porting a house-monitoring system from the Beagle Bone (an $89 embedded, ARM-based, I/O rich device running linux http://beagleboard.org/) to the new Beagle Bone Black, a $45 device which is faster, includes video and 2G of onboard flash. The sensors required a one-wire bus, one of which the original Beagle Bone had configured out of the box. The Beagle Bone Black had none. This talk is a description of what it took to get one-wire (specifically w1-gpio) going with his own custom "cape" (a daughter-board for the Beagle Bone). Biography: Russell Senior has been a GNU/Linux user for over 20 years, since the 0.99plN days, using it both recreationally and professionally as a research programmer/scientific data analyst. Since 2005, Russell has become involved as a principal volunteer with the Personal Telco Project (https://personaltelco.net), during which he has worked on embedded systems, primarily network routers. He contributes to the development and improvement of the OpenWrt project. In the last couple years, he has worked on monitoring systems involving Arduino and, since last year, the Beagle Bone and has learned a bit about the Angstrom distribution of linux for embedded devices. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting |
Thursday
Jul 4, 2013
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PLUG: MOVED TO JULY 11TH PSU Maseeh Engineering Building This month's 1st Thursday Portland Linux/Unix group meeting is moved to July 11th at the same time and place. Have a happy and safe 4th of July! |
Thursday
Jul 11, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Physical Security and Surveillance – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Steve Pasco will be discussing many aspects of physical security and the realities of our emerging surveillance culture. Steve is a seasoned Telecommunications and security professional, with more than 27 years experience, capable of managing and maintaining operational oversight of global, enterprise wide facilities and security command and control centers. Proficient in establishing policies, procedures, standards, and personnel training programs. A Telecommunications security expert in CALEA and J-STD-25 protocols. Expert in Security Systems, Access Control, Alarm Monitoring Video Surveillance, Asset Monitoring, Tracking and Protection. Operational experience in running 24/7 Command Control and Communications system with emphasis on Intelligence (C3I). Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting |
Thursday
Aug 1, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: The Perl Renaissance – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building The Portland Perl Mongers and Portland Linux/Unix Group are pleased to welcome world-renowned Perl trainer and developer Paul Fenwick The Perl Renaissance is in full swing. Object frameworks and syntax have been undated, web frameworks are easy and powerful, and modules are easy to manage and install. We will cover:
About Paul Adventuretarian. Enjoys Perl, social hacking, mycology, scuba diving, coffee, cycling, FOSS, meeting new people, and talking like a pirate. World famous in NZ. As usual, the meeting will be followed by social hour at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby |
Thursday
Oct 3, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: FreeNAS Plugins – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building FreeNAS is an open source Network Attached Storage system powered by FreeBSD that features the ZFS filesystem. Michael Dexter will demonstrate the FreeNAS 9.1.1 Plugins architecture using the Plex Media Server and various virtual machines. For more information: http://freenas.org Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
Thursday
Nov 7, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Samba 4 – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Brian Martin will talk about his early experiences with Samba 4 Samba provides open-source support for the Microsoft file sharing protocol. Version 4 of Samba was released late last year. It represented years of work and a major, some would say massive upgrade to Samba to include the ability to be a fully functional Active Directory server. Given the large scale changes, many people have been avoiding production Samba 4 use while waiting for the bugs to be worked out. Brian Martin has now started migrating production environments to Samba 4 and will discuss his early experiences. Bio: Brian Martin is the chief consultant for Martin Consulting Services, Inc. Martin Consulting has provided system administration services in Unix, Linux and Windows systems in the Portland metro area and across the country since 1996. Brian is a frequent attendee at PLUG. His past presentations include VMWare, production grade scripting, disaster recovery experiences, Linux containers, and logical volume management. Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
Thursday
Dec 5, 2013
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Portland Linux/Unix Group – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Portland's 12-month, three-track open source conference The Portland Linux/Unix Group meets three times a month: First Thursday General Meeting at PSU Third Tuesday Advanced Topics Meeting at Free Geek Third Sunday Clinic at Free Geek We try announce our speakers two weeks in advance but some times it is last minute. They're usually conference-quality none the less. Many attendees will break for a social hour at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
Thursday
Jan 2, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Advanced OpenSSH – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Carlos Aguayo will talk about about Advanced OpenSSH:
Carlos Aguayo is a veteran of the Silicon Valley's startup boom that produced both the Internet and the open-source movements as we know them today. He spent the 90's at companies like Sun Microsystems, Infoseek, General Magic, and Marimba, and was a major contributor at Hobnob, a mobile wireless networking venture. With a background in computer science and engineering, he has focused on corporate and datacenter infrastructure, networking and scalability. He is presently working as a systems engineer at XO Communications in Beaverton, and when not wrangling virtual machines, sings barbershop with the Bridge Town Sound. Many attendees will break for a social hour after the First Thursday meeting at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
Thursday
Feb 6, 2014
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PLUG: Public Speaking is the Greatest Skill You Can Possess – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building The Portland Linux/Unix Group: Portland's monthly, three-track tech conference, celebrating its 20th anniversary this spring!
Brian and Michael are back to teach you everything you ever wanted to know about speaking at an open source from PLUG (hint hint) to OSCON. Brian has years as an experienced Distinguished Toastmaster (beer available at the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting) and Michael has just submitted his paper for the upcoming AsiaBSDCon conference on a topic he had previously known nothing about. Why should you give a talk?
Highlight from our Advanced Topics talk: (paraphrased) "My mom got more value out of learning to community with Toastmasters than two years of a (VERY impressive school) scholarship." YOU may change careers a dozen times in your life and need a new skill set for each job but will ALWAYS need to express yourself and communicate on behalf of yourself and your team. Let PLUG be that first step in what could be worth more than a (VERY impressive school) scholarship! Brian says: In 2007 I made the switch from being a machinist to a real estate agent, shortly thereafter I was invited to investigate a Toastmasters club, in order to become a better communicator. Through 5 years and over 40 speeches in Toastmasters I reached the highest level of Distinguished Toastmaster. Simply stepping out of my comfort zone has given me the opportunity introduce dignitaries, and MC fund-raising events for worthwhile causes (notably a record breaking Clark County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner auction). Currently I am a recognized top 2% leader in AdvoCare International, helping others achieve their physical and financial goals. I enjoy using Linux on a personal level for the freedom that it represents. "You never get rid of public speaking butterflies, you just get them to fly in formation: ~Marv Serhan Michael says: Never in a 1,000 years will I speak in public yet I find myself doing it several times a month in Portland and at conferences around the world. I guarantee I'm no Brian Rohan but I fill rooms and get applause. The secret is finding the right room and just doing it. I will talk about the absolute worst that can happen (rarely what you think it would be), the open source conference community and how to get from submitting a proposal to stepping down from the stage. |
Thursday
Mar 6, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: pfSense – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building The Portland Linux/Unix Group pfSense by Jeff Carmichael and Brian Rohan Stream: http://pdxlinux.org/live/ pfSense offers an open source solution to replace commercial routers, firewalls, security, proxys, dns/dhcp/nat and more. It can be a single solution for most all network resources for a soho, and has been used successfully in small to medium sized businesses. When you are ready to replace your moon infected linksys router, pfSense offers a mature, flexible and capable solution. Many attendees will break for a social hour after the First Thursday meeting at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub NW at 1945 NW Quimby See you there! |
Thursday
Apr 3, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group 20th Anniversary: Ask Linus – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Date: March 24th, 1994 Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.help Subject: Linux Users Group!!! There is a Linux users group forming in Portland Oregon, if you are interested, email me at: ... our first meeting date has not been set, but will be in April sometime. Have Fun, Sean The Portland Linux/Unix Group is turning 20! We are celebrating with a Q&A session with the person who inspired this group of Linux and Unix users to come together and meet monthly for two decades: Linus Torvalds Seating is limited and you can RSVP at: http://plug.eventbrite.com We cannot guarantee a place for everyone and priority will be given to those who RSVP. You can try to watch the live stream from the lobby. Live stream: http://pdxlinux.org/live/ IRC: #pdxlinux on irc.geekshed.net Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW at 1945 NW Quimby after the meeting. Rideshares available. |
Thursday
May 1, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Federated Wiki – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Ward Cunningham What: Federated Wiki Where: PSU, 1930 SW 4th Ave. Room FAB 86-01 (Lower Level) When: Thursday, May 1st, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom Stream: http://pdxlinux.org/live/ UNIX introduced the notion of software tools, small programs assembled together as pipelines. Almost as innovative what its notion of a workbench, a place where work in progress could be shared by passing references, file paths, among collaborators. I draw huge inspiration from these contributions, both of which happened within my professional lifetime. In this talk I will describe analogous structures in Federated Wiki, a project that hopes to host the doing of things as well as the talk about doing things. Ward Cunningham has worked for and consulted to daring startups and huge corporations. He has served as CTO, Director, Fellow, Principle Engineer and Inventor. He is best known for creating wiki. He leads an open-source project rebuilding wiki to solve more complex sharing situations addressing some of societies toughest problems. Ward founded movements in object-oriented, agile software, extreme programming and pattern languages. Ward lives in Portland, Oregon and works for New Relic, Inc. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting. |
Thursday
Jun 5, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Security and OpenSSH – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Steve Dum What: Security and OpenSSH Where: PSU, 1930 SW 4th Ave. Room FAB 86-01 (Lower Level) When: Thursday, June 5th, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom Stream: http://pdxlinux.org/live/ We will look at the security provided by OpenSSH and how the environment it is used in affects it's security. When can SSH security improve network security and when can't it. This presentation assumes you have a basic understanding of SSH and how it is setup. Those topics will be reviewed very rapidly as we dig deeper into the security aspects of SSH. The discussion concentrates on SSH authentication using asymetric or public key encryption. SSH is widely used to provide convenient and secure access to multiple machines on a local network, and to tunnel into remote networks to access machines on those networks that aren't directly visible to your local machine. We will analyze various use scenario's of SSH in these two usage scenario's and also the advantages and disadvantages of using an agent to facilitate SSH connections. For each of these scenario's, we will discuss the privacy aspects of one's passphrase and private keys, how secure the transmitted data is, and the ability of others to 'borrow' your credentials. You should walk away from this presentation with a better understanding of what actions you need to take to maximize your privacy, while reaping the benefits of using SSH. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW at 1945 NW Quimby after the meeting. |
Thursday
Jul 3, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Lowest Common Denomiator Coding with vi and sh – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Michael Dexter What: Lowest Common Denominator Coding with vi and sh Where: PSU, 1930 SW 4th Ave. Room FAB 86-01 (Lower Level) When: Thursday, July 3rd, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom Stream: http://pdxlinux.org/live/ There are countless available text editors, programming languages and Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) but few are guaranteed to be present on any given system. On POSIX Unix systems, the vi(1) text editor and sh(1) shell are required by the POSIX (opengroup.org) standard and might be the only development tools at your disposal. While some developers may consider these tools equivalent to a doughnut spare tire that should not be used over 50MPH, others embrace them and have used them for decades. Some would also argue that you should learn the rules before you break them in order to appreciate higher-level languages. This talk will be a crash course in vi(1) and sh(1) with examples from a 2500 line virtualization management project that uses a number of scripting techniques. Michael provides independent Unix support and organizes PLUG. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW after the meeting. |
Thursday
Aug 7, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: An Open Hardware Case Study: The AK-47 – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Beth 'pidge' Flanagan What: Open Sourcing the Modern Battle Rifle: Legal and technical implications in home building the semi-automatic AK-47 Where: PSU, 1930 SW 4th Ave. Room FAB 86-01 (Lower Level) When: Thursday, August 7th, 2014 at 7pm Why: The pursuit of technology freedom Stream: http://pdxlinux.org/live/ A look at the technical and legal issues surrounding home construction of firearms, focusing on semi-automatic AK-47 style rifles. Home gun building brings interesting legal and technical challenges needed to keep someone both safe and on the right side of the law. This requires an individual to be both an amateur metalsmith as well as knowing the ins and outs of firearms and international patent law. This talk will discuss the building of the semi-automatic AK47 rifle from a technical perspective, from demilling parts kits to the construction of a fully functional semi-automatic weapon. We will also discuss the origins of the AK design, the history of it’s variants and its current patent status as a public domain firearm design, delving into Soviet and Russian Federation patent law as well as US firearms law. Bio: Beth 'pidge' Flanagan is an embedded linux geek who works at Intel's Open Source Technology Center on the Yocto Project. Beth also gave a keynote at OSCON 2014, "Yes, Your Refrigerator Is Trying To Kill You..." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vd8dXzAL-W8 Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW at 1945 NW Quimby after the meeting. |
Thursday
Sep 4, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Private Encrypted Communications: The Blackphone – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Louis Kowolowski This talk is an overview of private encrypted communications, focusing on software from Silent Circle, LLC and hardware from SGP, the makers of Blackphone. If the network cooperates, there will be demos of both the voice and text services. Louis Kowolowski is a 16 year veteran in the fields of UNIX, networking, and security. He is the Technical Operations Manager of Silent Circle, a communications company headquartered Geneva, CH, providing simple yet secure encrypted voice, video, text and file transfer. He has a passion for automation and scalable internet architectures and when not working, enjoys amateur photography and traveling with his wife. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW at 1945 NW Quimby after the meeting. |
Thursday
Oct 2, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Diversity in Open Source: What We Can Do – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Jennifer Davidson If you're involved in tech and/or open source, you know the community suffers from a lack of diversity. The big question is: Why? Even more powerful is: What can each of us do to build a community that is welcoming of contributors from all backgrounds? Jennifer Davidson will shed light on these issues and discuss what ChickTech is doing locally in Portland. Expect actionable steps we can take as a community to increase diversity in tech. Jennifer Davidson is a User Experience Researcher and Designer at Intel. She received a PhD in Computer Science with an emphasis in Human-Computer Interaction from Oregon State University in June 2014. She is the Interim Board President for ChickTech (http://chicktech.org). Her passions include studying open source communities, designing software that works for humans, and doing outreach to build women in tech communities. Jennifer has given talks at OSCON, Open Source Bridge, Open Source Systems, Code n' Splode, and many academic conferences. Many will head to the Lucky Lab NW at 1945 NW Quimby after the meeting. Rideshares Available See you there! Michael Dexter |
Thursday
Nov 6, 2014
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Portland Linux/Unix Group – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Jesse Bufton Web-based file hosting, synchronization, and collaborative editing services have made sharing files easier than ever. While these features aren't new, the web 2.0 cloud context they are being offered through has brought them to the reach of the average user with low barriers to use. These freemium services often come at a hidden price of control, privacy, and usually security. This presentation will give an overview of what ownCloud is, why one might use it, what technologies it employs, the services & features it offers, how to set it up, and discuss the use case the presenter has deployed. Jesse Bufton is an independent web designer/developer and sometimes graphic designer. Jesse began his journey to *nix operating systems in 2000. In his most zen of moments, Jesse forages wild plants, hunts mushrooms, and ferments both food and beverage with friends--all accounted for on the blog Fermentemptations.com Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Feb 5, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Escaping GMail – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Louis Kowolowski If you’ve wanted to run your own mail server, but held back because it sounded complicated, fear no more. In mere days you too can have a GMail-like experience. Using common household tools such as Postfix, Dovecot, and MySQL, you can have a pointy clicky UI for your mail administration and webmail needs. I’ll be showing a demo that utilizes Postfix, Dovecot, PostfixAdmin, Sieve, MySQL, and RoundCube. Account manipulation (creating domains and users) through a webby, webmail, and server side mail filters. All of this is done on FreeBSD but can also be done on others such as Linux, Solaris, or even Irix (if you love pain). Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Mar 5, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: The Future of Copyleft – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Bradley M. Kuhn Copyleft licenses, particularly the GPL and LGPL, are widely used throughout the Free Software community. However, recent for-profit corporate interest in Free Software development has led to a renewed preference toward non-copyleft licensing by for-profit entities. Meanwhile, many for-profit entities that do use copyleft for their own software now do so in a manner that most copyleft aficionados find, at best, distasteful and at worst, abusive. A long-standing truce exists in our community between fans of non-copyleft licensing and copyleft. No one in the copyleft communities disputes that non-copylefted Free Software is an important part of our community. However, copyleft faces new challenges that make past debates about the appropriateness of copyleft seem quite minor by comparison. This talk will discuss all aspects of the complicated situation facing copyleft, including younger developers apparent preference for non-copyleft licensing (as expressed, in part, in the "post-open source" debates), the widespread and common failures for companies to comply with GPL's relatively easy requirements, and how licensing choices are today, unlike in the past, rarely in the hands of individual developers, but instead their corporate employers. Bradley M. Kuhn is the President and Distinguished Technologist at Software Freedom Conservancy (sfconservancy.org) and on the Board of Directors of the Free Software Foundation (FSF). Kuhn began his work in the software freedom movement as a volunteer in 1992, when he became an early adopter of the GNU/Linux operating system, and began contributing to various FLOSS projects. He worked during the 1990s as a system administrator and software developer for various companies, and taught AP Computer Science at Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati. Kuhn's non-profit career began in 2000, when he was hired by the FSF. As FSF's Executive Director from 2001–2005, Kuhn led FSF's GPL enforcement, launched its Associate Member program, and invented the Affero GPL. From 2005-2010, Kuhn worked as the Policy Analyst and Technology Director of the Software Freedom Law Center. Kuhn was the primary volunteer for Conservancy from 2006–2010, and has been a full-time staffer since early 2011. Kuhn holds a summa cum laude B.S. in Computer Science from Loyola University in Maryland, and an M.S. in Computer Science from the University of Cincinnati. Kuhn's Master's thesis discussed methods for dynamic interoperability of FLOSS programming languages. Kuhn received the O'Reilly Open Source Award in 2012, in recognition for his lifelong policy work on copyleft licensing. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Apr 2, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: MP4 Metadata Editing – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Portland Linux/Unix Group General Meeting Announcement Who: Latham Loop Latham Loop will present an overview of adding and editing text based subtitles and metadata to the popular MP4 video file format. This can be beneficial to those desiring an alternate language translation when watching video, and to the hearing impaired. Open source tools Subler, Subtitle Edit, FFMPEG, Plex for Mac, Windows and Linux, will be discussed. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
May 7, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Block Storage Device Life Cycles – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Portland Linux/Unix Group: Block Storage Device Life Cycles Who: Michael Dexter Block storage has joined electricity as one of the fundamental technologies on which we are completely and irrevocably dependent. The two technologies are in fact becoming inextricable now that computers control virtually every electrical system from the distribution grids on up, and computers themselves are completely dependent on electricity to operate. Both technologies have undergone countless innovations yet still operate largely on their original basic principles. While high in capacity, fast and affordable, the modern hardware block storage device or “hard disk” operates on the same principles as the original 1956 IBM 350 disk storage unit and most solid-state alternatives emulate hard disks. Beginning with the Berkeley Fast File System, the BSD family of operating systems has played a key role in the evolution of general purpose block storage and continues this innovation with technologies like virtual block storage devices, GEOM, UFS2, ZFS, GELI, HAST, GEOM Journaling, FUSE, tmpfs and the NAND Flash framework. This paper will survey the available block device options in the FreeBSD operating system and explore their practical uses in modern storage architectures. FreeBSD is unique in that it provides the reference platform for the Unix File System and is now a tier one Zettabyte File System or ZFS platform. The 10.0 release of FreeBSD is particularly unique in that it includes in-kernel iSCSI network block device sharing, the NAND Flash framework, a FUSE implementation and the bhyve hypervisor which can leverage and help test most FreeBSD storage technologies. The FreeBSD ports collection also includes support for guest file systems such as ext2 and NTFS, which provide new opportunities to "round trip" virtual and physical machines using bhyve and tools such as the iBFT iSCSI boot framework. Finally, while an unprecedented block storage toolkit can enable extensive experimentation, there are pragmatic issues surrounding production storage architectures. This paper will touch on real world block storage solutions built with FreeBSD and its derivatives. These derivatives include the FreeNAS storage appliance, which provides networked block and file storage to a myriad of Unix and non-Unix clients. Pragmatic issues surrounding verifiable data integrity include: understanding and embracing ZFS behavior and limits, observing disk and partition health in addition to data integrity, understanding the implications of file naming, maintaining backups and restoring desired data in a timely manner. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Jun 4, 2015
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Hardware and why it matters – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: John Hawley Open Hardware is starting to change the way the world works, giving more people access to customizable hardware, and giving more power to smaller entities. I intend to give a general overview of open hardware, focusing on the MinnowBoard MAX, and use it as a case study of what people are doing with it and why the open hardware is important to the space it's entering. John 'Warthog9' Hawley led the system administration team on kernel.org for nearly a decade, leading a team including four other administrators. His other exploits include working on Syslinux, OpenSSI, a caching Gitweb, and patches to bind to enable GeoDNS. He's the author of PXE Knife, a set of interfaces around common utilities and diagnostics tools needed by an average systems administrator, as well as SyncDiff(erent) a state-full file synchronizer and file transfer mechanism. He currently works for Intel working on Open Hardware, and the Minnowboard. In his free time he enjoys cooking extravagant meals and watching bad movies. Many will head to the Lucky Lab at 1945 NW Quimby St. after the meeting. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Thursday
Apr 7, 2016
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Portland Linux/Unix Group: What's new in PostgreSQL 9.5 – PSU Maseeh Engineering Building Who: Josh Berkus PostgreSQL 9.5 has many new and cool features for database users, making the venerable RDBMS suitable for even more workloads. Among them are:
PostgreSQL Core Team member Josh Berkus will take you on a tour of the new features, including demos of many of them, and field questions about PostgreSQL in general. About Josh Josh Berkus is on the Core Team of the PostgreSQL Project, and was a professional database geek for 18 years. Today, he works for Red Hat as the community lead for Project Atomic, which means he's all about the containers. He has used a Linux desktop since 2001. Rideshares Available PLUG Page with information about all PLUG events: http://pdxlinux.org/ Follow PLUG on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pdxlinux PLUG is open to everyone and does not tolerate abusive behavior on its mailing lists or at its meetings. |
Wednesday
Dec 16, 2009
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PLUG Advanced Topics: DRDB HA Clustering on Commodity HW – Roots Organic Brewing [Out of business. *Sigh*] Using DRBD to Build High-Availability Clusters on Commodity Hardware Charlie Schluting of LINBIT will explain how DRBD works and how people currently use it, with enough information to get you started building your own clusters. DRBD stands for Distributed Replicated Block Device, and as the name implies, allows you to replicate block devices over TCP. DRBD is extremely flexible due to the fact it is a block device, and as such is used in a variety of situations. At the most basic level, you can replicate data between two servers to provide synchronously replicated storage redundancy for either failover or disaster recovery purposes. In active/active mode, you can also run GFS, OCFS2, or other clustered file systems. Topics that will be covered: - How it works, history, and future exciting news regarding mainline kernel inclusion - How it is used: HA-iSCSI, HA-NFS, Virtualization, Apache, Samba, etc. - Cluster Resource Manager options and recommendations, and news about the confusing changes in the Linux-HA / Clusterlabs communities. And the majority of the time will be spent on: - Example cluster configuration: hardware setup, installation and configuration, and cluster manager integration. Come with questions! |
Wednesday
Feb 17, 2010
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PLUG Advanced Topics: OpenEmbedded – Roots Organic Brewing [Out of business. *Sigh*] OpenEmbedded Getting started in embedded Linux development can be intimidating. Every hardware device vendor seems to have its own embedded Linux distribution and way of developing for it. OpenEmbedded (OE) is a framework for creating highly customizable embedded Linux distributions. It provides a well-designed build system and cross-compilation environment to developers, and a robust package management system for setting up and maintaining your embedded Linux system. Find out why OpenEmbedded is taking the embedded world by storm and improving the lives of embedded Linux developers. Scott Garman is a Linux Software Engineer at Russound, a leader in multi-room audio systems, which allow you to enjoy music throughout your home. |
Wednesday
Mar 17, 2010
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PLUG Advanced Topics: What Went Wrong with My Disaster Recovery Plan – Roots Organic Brewing [Out of business. *Sigh*] Brian Martin will be test-driving his IEEE presentation on his experiences in a true, "abandon the building" disaster recovery effort. He'll place particular emphasis on where technically sound, well-tested disaster plans often fail in a real disaster, and how these problems can be overcome. The best data center disaster recovery plans are developed carefully and tested regularly. If you're at that stage, you may think you are well prepared. In this entertaining presentation, Brian Martin describes the unexpected problems that arose when a well thought out and tested plan met a real disaster, and draws lessons that are applicable to any disaster recovery situation. Brian Martin has spent 30 years in the IT field, fairly evenly divided between being a mainframe system programmer and a server system administrator. He has operated Martin Consulting Services in the Portland Oregon area since moving to Portland from the San Francisco Bay Area in 1996. He has a wife, two cats, a dog, and nine in-service computers at home. |
Wednesday
Apr 21, 2010
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PLUG Advanced Topics: What's new in Linux Wireless – Roots Organic Brewing [Out of business. *Sigh*] This talk will present some highlights in Linux Wireless development made over the past year or so. Some of these developments resulted in new userspace tools which will be introduced. We will then highlight recent developments in Intel's Linux Wireless driver. Reinette is the maintainer of Intel's Linux wireless driver (iwlwifi) and is a member of the Open Source Technology Center (OTC), within the Intel Software and Services Group (SSG). Please spread the word! |
Wednesday
May 19, 2010
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PLUG Advanced Topics: DRBD & Pacemaker part II by Adam Gandelman – Roots Organic Brewing [Out of business. *Sigh*] DRBD stands for Distributed Replicated Block Device. Mainline in the Linux kernel since 2.6.33, it is used to replicate data at the block level over the network in a "network RAID1" fashion. It is generally deployed as a cost effective, shared-nothing alternative to a SAN and used as the building block for high availability clusters. Pacemaker is currently the de facto open-source cluster resource manager (CRM) for Linux HA clustering. With it, nodes and services can be monitored and managed to ensure maximum uptime in the face of the most severe service and hardware level failures. Combining the two allows admins to %99.999 uptime at a fraction of the price of proprietary alternatives. In LINBIT's second PLUG Advance Topics installment, Adam Gandelman will give a more in-depth view of DRBD and Pacemaker and demonstrate how they work closely together to keep applications running and consistent. During the second half of the presentation, Adam will provide attendees with a real-world example by configuring a highly-available LAMP cluster from the ground up. Though geared toward web services, the concepts presented can easily be expanded to provide the HA gaurantee to virtually any Linux service. Agenda: - Brief re-introduction to DRBD, Pacemaker and HA clustering concepts. - Overview of various use cases and interesting deployments - Configuration and implementation of a highly-available LAMP cluster using DRBD for data redundancy and Pacemaker for resource management. Adam Gandelman is an expert in open-source clustering and high availability. Originally from New England, Adam lives in Portland, OR where he has been working at LINBIT, developers of DRBD and maintainers of Heartbeat. Aside from providing top-level Linux High-Availability and Disaster Recovery consulting for customers in the Americas, he leads LINBIT training courses in the US, doubles as a technical writer and regularly contributes to related open-source projects. |