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Re: [OSSG - Committee Forum] Re: need to confirm programme by end of Wednesday
- To: committee@ossg.bcs.org
- Subject: Re: [OSSG - Committee Forum] Re: need to confirm programme by end of Wednesday
- From: markelkins
- Date: Fri, 02 Sep 2005 16:30:00 +0000
Gary and all
Thanks for the reply. I will try and make a start organizing the Security event for on or around 14 March 2005 next week if thats ok.
Mark
Subject: final programme - still gaps towards the end though
From: garylloyd
To: committee@ossg.bcs.org
Date: Fri, 02 Sep 2005 10:55:00 +0000
OSSG
Programme
Date and Time: 27
October 05 - 18:00 to 21:00
Topic: Open
Source Software Quality in Practice
Venue:
Southampton Solent University formerly Southampton Institute, HC024,
Herbert Collins Building, East Park Terrace, Southampton (7 minutes
walk from Southampton Central Railway Station)
Speakers: The main speakers will be Mark Taylor, Executive
Director of the
Open Source Consortium, which is currently at the centre of the
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM) sponsored Open Source
Academy; and Dr Graham Oakes, a Systems Engineer with over 20 years
worldwide private and public sector experience.
Mark
Taylor is the founder and Executive Director of the Open Source
Consortium (OSC), which has a membership of more than 80 of the
leading Open Source businesses in the UK.
The
OSC has a dual purpose: (1) To do business with the UK Government and
Public Sector; and (2) To act as the two way communication vehicle
between Government and the Open Source community and emerging
Industry.
The
OSC is currently at the centre of the ODPM sponsored Open Source
Academy. More details about the OSC can be found at
http://www.opensourceconsortium.org.
Dr
Graham Oakes set up his own independent consultancy, Graham Oakes
Ltd, in 2003 to help organisations use technology to achieve their
business goals. Contact details for Graham can be found at
http://www.grahamoakes.co.uk.
Prior to going independent, he was Director of Technology at Sapient
Ltd, where he set up and managed project review processes for the
fixed-price/fixed-time projects Sapient delivered to clients such as
BP, Hilton International, Vodafone and the Office of the eEnvoy.
Prior
to working for Sapient, he set up and managed the project review
process for Sony/Psygnosisâ?? portfolio of 60 development projects,
with an annual budget of £50m. His client list includes Amnesty
International, Cisco Worldwide Education, The Open University, Oxfam,
Intermediate Technology Development Group, MessageLabs, and Sapient
Ltd.
For
more information about this event please contact Mark Elkins via
email address mark_elkins@bcs.org
or phone 023 80 319560.
Date
and Time: 10 November 05
Topic:
Open Source Technology Stack
Venue:
Oxford â?? Joint meeting with Oxfordshire Branch
Speakers:
Alan Lenton
The
â??Open Source Technology Stackâ?? which has been in wide
use for many years but only recently gained an acronym,
is referred to as â??LAMPâ??. LAMP stands for four
components
Linux (or Free BSD?, or any other free Unix-like OS)
Apache, the world's leading web server which also provides
many other network services
MySQL (or PostreSQL, or BerkeleyDB, or another open source
database)
Python (or Perl
or PHP): a high level application programming and scripting language,
usually combined with a web templating system to generate dynamic pages
and forms.
Alan
Lenton is in charge of game design and development and overall
technical matters for Interactive Broadcasting. Alan handles all the
design for new and existing games, and the programming for new games.
Date
and Time: 12 December at 18:00
Topic:
An Introduction to Open Source for Developers and Managers â?? twin
track meetings
Venue:
Southampton Street, London
Speakers:
Barry Cornelius of OSS Watch and Mark Taylor, CEO Sirius
A
meeting to introduce the key features, benefits and pit-falls of open
source development to both developers and IT managers with little or
no experience of the field.
Introduction
to Open Source: a track for developers
This
track first introduces the principles of open source development and
then
explores the way in which a successful development community can be
built.
1.
Introducing open source principles
Open
source software is distinguished from conventional IT development in
several ways. It uses a set of licences which aim to promote
widespread availability and distribution; it is often developed using
an informal style of development and community building; and it is
associated with a social movement around sharing code for the common
good. This session will explore these aspects in more detail, and
demonstrate the wide range of activities and software associated with
the label "open source", and drawn together by a common
licencing regime.
2.
Open source and communities
The
success of open source is often put down to the development of
communities. But how do we create a viable community? What is the
secret behind the widespread success of projects as disparate as the
Debian distribution, Apache, and Moodle? In this session we will look
at the different types of community, and describe modes of
interaction with them.
Sebastian
Rahtz is Manager of OSS Watch. OSS Watch ((www.oss-watch.ac.uk)
is funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) to
provide unbiased advice and guidance about free and open source
software for UK further and higher education. Sebastian is also
Information Manager for Oxford University Computing Services, and
Oxford's representative on the Text Encoding Initiative. He is an XML
bigot, after a previous incarnation as a heavy-duty TeX enthusiast.
Stuart
Yeates is a Research Officer for OSS Watch, specializing in the study
of software development. With a background in software engineering
and computer science, Stuart has participated in a number of open
source software and open content projects. He maintains an educause
blog on open source software in education.
Barry
Cornelius joined OSS Watch as a Development Officer in March 2005.
Previously, he was a support person in the IT Service at the
University of Durham. There he looked after Apache httpd, Apache
tomcat, MySQL and OpenLDAP servers. Prior to this he was a lecturer
in Computer Science. He has interests in XML, XSL, Java, C# and Web
Services, and has produced books on Modula-2 and Java.
Date
and Time: 10 January 05 at 18:30
Topic:
An overview of Open Source Licensing: Obligations
that licences, do or do not, place on users, distributors and
modifiers of OSS
Venue:
BCS Southampton Street, London
Speaker:
Andrew Katz, a solicitor with specialist legal
firm Moorcrofts LLP
Andrew
Katz is a solicitor with specialist legal firm Moorcrofts LLP. Prior
to becoming a lawyer, he was a software developer and has released
code under the GPL. He advises clients on software licensing issues,
including the use of open source, and has debated points with
luminaries such as Eben Moglen, Cory Doctorow and Larry Lessig. He
was involved in drafting the England and Wales Creative Commons
licence, which is the basis of the licence adopted by the BBC for its
Creative Archive project.
Date
and Time: 14 February 06
Topic:
Software Patents â?? Good or Evil?
Venue:
To be confirmed
Speaker:
To be confirmed
Date
and Time: 14 March 06
Topic:
Is Open Source Secure?
Venue:
To be confirmed
Speakers:
To be confirmed
No progress on this
Date
and Time: 11 April 06
Topic:
Case Study - Oxfam and Open Source (TBC) â?? TO BE REPLACED BY
AGILE?????????? Graham to advise
Venue:
Oxford
Speaker:
Romilly Gregory Systems Architecture Manager for Oxfam GB
Ms Romilly Gregory. Systems Architecture Manager for Oxfam GB, responsible for Oxfams web based and marketing systems. Also responsible for ensuring Oxfam GB adopts well thought through technical strategies for both infrastructure and applications. Worked for 20 years in the IT industry as a developer and IT manager, mainly in not for profit sector, notably for Amnesty International and Clinical Operational Research Unit (University College, London).
Date
and Time: 9 May 06
Topic:
Case Study - Open Source versus Free Software...a debate
Venue:
?
No progress on this