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FLOSS UK – Spring 2014

Old Ship Inn Brighton

18th March – 20st March 2014

FLOSS UK’s annual Spring conference will take place in Brighton from the 18th to the 20st March 2014.

This is the UK’s only conference aimed specifically at systems and network administrators. It attracts a large number of professionals from sites of all shapes and sizes. As well as the technical talks, the conference provides a friendly environment for delegates to meet, learn, and enjoy lively debate on a host of subjects.

If you would like to offer a half day workshop that might interest our target audience, or if you have a novel solution to a problem, experience of a particular application or hardware platform, tips and tricks for fellow systems administrators, or a favourite tool you could talk about, please submit a proposal or a paper for consideration by the programme committee.

There will be a prize for the best talk.

Initial closing date for abstracts: 15th November 2013

There is a Twitter event on lanyrd.

Also see the conference website here  for further details such as:

  • Call for Papers
  • Schedule / Timetable
  • Booking
  • Speakers
  • Sponsorship Opportunities
  • Accommodation
  • Venue
  • Travel
  • etc.

BCS OSSG AGM + talk on Brooks’ Law in a Free Software context on 13th November 2013 at 6:30pm – BCS HQ

The BCS OSSG AGM is to be held on the 13th November from 6:30pm  followed by a talk on FLOSS research by Dr Andrea Capiluppi, Brunel University London and Dr. Paul James Adams from KDAB.

Venue: BCS, First Floor, The Davidson Building, 5 Southampton Street, London, WC2E 7HA

You will need to book a place this event using the booking link  for the evening event: https://events.bcs.org/book/853/

Closing date for bookings is Tuesday 12 November 2013 at 11:59pm. No more bookings will be taken after this date.

There will be  tea and coffee before the meeting starts followed by sandwiches after the FLOSS talk.

The timetable for the evening will be:

  • 18:00 – Registration & refreshments
  • 18:30 – AGM
  • 18:45 – FLOSS Talk
  • 19:45 – Q&A
  • 20:00 – Networking
  • 21:30 – Close

(more…)


Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial (FOSSG) Hackathon

FOSS4G 2013 Nottingham
Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial
East Midlands Conference Centre, Nottingham, UK, 17th – 21st September
Are you interested in using open source tools and new sources of data to build something useful whilst also helping with environmental issues?
Perhaps you are keen to find out about the latest sources of freely available open data, or just interested in meeting new people and helping to design useful and innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing problems?

Geohack Logo

The Global Geohack

The Global Geohack is a free, two-day event taking place in the GeoCamp during the run-up to this year’s FOSS4G conference in Nottingham.
See the geohack menu for more information on the event challenges and also for frequently asked questions.
To help us gauge numbers and to register your interest, visit our web page.
You do not have to be attending FOSS4G to participate, but you will have to arrange accommodation if you plan to stay overnight.
For more information, go to www.geohack.org

Flossie 2013 Conference in London 8-9 November – Tickets now available

 

Flossie 2013

Flossie 2013 is a two-day event for women who use or are otherwise interested in any aspect of open technology, open knowledge, digital arts, and social innovation.

Tickets now available!

Whether you code, tinker, use FLOSS in your projects, want to explore open alternatives, or just want to change the world, all women are welcome – from expert to novice, or anywhere in between. Flossie 2013 is a chance to showcase your project, share skills, find inspiration, or talk about something which really interests you. We’re also scheduling plenty of time to network, share and build on ideas, and to meet new friends and old. Both days will contain micro-talks and birds of a feather sessions, as well as longer and more structured workshops and discussions. We will also be showcasing an exhibition of digital artwork.

Who is this event for?

In a word, ‘anyone’. However, the event is organised around a common commitment to celebrating and enabling womens contribution to FLOSS culture. Therefore talks, workshops and exhibitions will be by women only (specifically including trans and genderqueer women) but men are welcome attend the event if they have an interest in the gendering of technology. In particular, Flossie 2013 will be of interest to:

  • Women users of FLOSS in digital arts, free culture, and social movements
  • Women coders and developers
  • Coders and advocates of open knowledge, open data, open education and open research
  • Researchers, students and writers
  • Women entrepreneurs, not-for-profits, and social innovators

“The Ownership of the Means of Production by the Proletariat” – A talk by Adran Bowyer on the RepRap 3D printer

http://reprap.org/mediawiki/reprap_logo.png

“The Ownership of the Means of Production by the Proletariat”

A talk by by Adrian Bowyer

Plus (new)

“Experiences from the Thames Valley RepRap User Group”

A talk by by Alan Wood

Wednesday – October 2nd 2013

BCS , First Floor, The Davidson Building, 5 Southampton Street, London , WC2E 7HA – 17:30pm – 21:00PM

BCS Open Source SG joint event with the Open Source Hardware Users Group.

Price: Free to attend for both BCS Members and Non-members.
 
Tea and coffee will be available from 17:30 to 18:30. Dr Bowyer will speak from 18:30 to 19:30 followed by Q and A, then sandwiches and juice and water aiming to finish by 20:30/21:00.

“The Ownership of the Means of Production by the Proletariat”

Subject

Look at your computer setup. Imagine you hooked up a 3D printer. Instead of printing on bits of paper this 3D printer makes real, robust, mechanical parts. To give you an idea of how robust, think Lego bricks and you’re in the right area. You could make lots of useful stuff, but interestingly you could also make lots of the parts to make another 3D printer. That would be a machine that could copy itself.

This talk will be about RepRap – the Replicating Rapid-prototyper.  This 3D printer builds the component up in layers of plastic.  This technology already existed before RepRap, but the cheapest proprietary machine then would have set you back £15,000. And it wasn’t even designed so that it could make itself.  So what the RepRap team have done is to develop and to give away the designs for a much cheaper machine with the novel capability of being able to self-copy (material costs are about £300).  That way it’s accessible to small communities in the developing world as well as individuals in the developed world.  The RepRap machine is being distributed entirely free to everyone using open-source – so, if you have one, you can make another and give it to a friend…

Biography:

Adrian Bowyer holds a first degree and a PhD in engineering from Imperial College.  He was an academic at the University of Bath for 35 years.  He retired in 2012 to help to run the company RepRap Professional Ltd.

His areas of research are geometric modelling and geometric computing in general (he is one of the authors of the Bowyer-Watson algorithm for Voronoi diagrams), the application of computers to manufacturing, and biomimetics.  In 2004 he created RepRap – humanity’s first self-replicating general-purpose manufacturing machine.

 

“Experiences from the Thames Valley RepRap User Group”

Subject

Thames Valley RepRap User Group (TVRRUG) was set up to provide support
to those who wanted to build their own RepRap 3D printer, and to
exchange information and ideas between those who had already
successfully completed builds.

TVRRUG has now organised three group build rounds, sourcing and
printing parts, and resulting in many working printers. Along the way
the group has produced extensive documentation, and designed its own
electronics and a variant of the Prusa Mendel design.

Biography:

Alan Wood originally trained in systems engineering, and got lost in
software engineering and F/OSS for a decade, before returning back to
his hardware roots via the open source hardware and makers movement
that has gathered momentum in recent years.

Please book using the following link: https://events.bcs.org/book/740/

Closing date for bookings is Monday 30 September 2013 at 11:59pm.


Internet of things Mash-up Day 23rd of July, University of Oxford


BOOK YOUR PLACE: http://iotmashup.eventbrite.com/
Workshop Day for IOT Device Vendors
Develop interoperable drivers for your IOT/M2M devices

Practical Interoperability of Devices – Port your Device onto the Open Source Framework – Getting Your Device Working with a wide Ecosystem with Expert help – Facilitating Programmatic Access and Control for Your Devices – Securely Sharing Data Between Different Devices. Creating Data Mash-Ups between Different Devices and People.

A FREE one-day event run by the webinos consortium where you can be briefed on state-of-the-art Internet of Things and Machine to Machine technologies. The day will be split into two halves

  • Morning: A series of brief talks given by industry experts. Rapidly get up to speed with some of the most significant developments in the IOT/M2M/sensor industry
  • Afternoon: webinos developers will give one-on-one consultation on deep technical issues, and for those bringing devices to the event, hands-on assistance working with and integrating the code

Who is it relevant for: Application developers
Any application developers that has an interest in working with a broad spectrum of devices and taking live data feeds from connected sensors. For example, driver and vehicle diagnostics, usage-based insurance, home automation controllers, health monitoring services, and eco-consultancies.

This event is free. You will get free implementation consultancy, meet with like minded people and be part of the expert briefing sessions. The value of the technology is ‘ecosystem benefit’. You will make your device connect with others and experience interoperability with the Apps and Services which run across the open source webinos platform.

 
More information on the event can be found on the website http://www.webinos.org/blog/2013/06/26/internet-of-things-mash-up-day-23rd-of-july-university-of-oxford/

 


Augmented Reality for Walkers on Android – BCS OSSG joint event with BCS Hampshire

BCS OSSG + BCS Hampshire – Augmented Reality for Walkers on Android

Thursday July 4th 2013

6:00 PM to 8:30 PM

Location : Southampton Solent University , Room 326 3rd Floor Reginald Mitchell Building Southampton Solent University , SO14 0RD
Speaker: Dr Nick Whitelegg

Augmented reality – the concept of overlaying the real world with digital data – is becoming increasingly popular in the smartphone app world.

This talk will discuss the development of an Android augmented reality app for walkers in which the camera feed is overlaid with footpath data from OpenStreetMap.

The talk will discuss the technical details of how the app is being developed – including use of the sensor and OpenGL APIs – as well as some of the issues surrounding the real-world usability of the app.

Nick Whitelegg is a senior lecturer in Computing (Web Development) at Southampton Solent University and teaches on a range of undergraduate software development courses including Java and web development. He has contributed software and data to the OpenStreetMap mapping project and has developed an open source mapping site and associated tools for walkers.

This free event is open to both BCS and Non-BCS attendees, jointly with the Hampshire Branch, BCS Open Source SG and Southampton Solent University.

Booking details : https://events.bcs.org/book/717/ .

 

 


Free event – Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) EUROPEAN TOUR 2013 – Cambridge – 13th May

Eu tour1.png

OWASP European Tour 2013
in conjunction with Anglia Ruskin University’s Department of Computing and Technology
13 May 2013
11am – 5.15pm
LAB 002, Lord Ashcroft Building, Anglia Ruskin University, 
Cambridge

The OWASP European Tour objective is to raise awareness about application security in the European region, so that people and organizations can make informed decisions about true application security risks. Everyone is free to participate in OWASP and all of our materials are available under a free and open software license.

A series of activities such as free conferences, trainings sessions and awareness games will be provided by renowned professionals with the sole purpose of bringing high-quality content and a comprehensive breadth of security topics across the EU region.

Who Should Attend the European Tour?

  • Application Developers
  • Application Testers and Quality Assurance
  • Application Project Management and Staff
  • Chief Information Officers, Chief Information Security Officers, Chief Technology Officers, Deputies, Associates and Staff
  • Chief Financial Officers, Auditors, and Staff Responsible for IT Security Oversight and Compliance
  • Security Management and Staff
  • Executives, Mangers, and Staff Responsible for IT Security Governance
  • IT Professionals Interested in Improving IT Security
  • Anyone interested in learning about or promoting Web Application Security
For more information and the agenda, download the official programme:

You can register for this free event online.

Everyone is free to participate in OWASP and all of our materials are available under a free and open software

license. Apart from OWASP’s Top 10, most OWASP Projects are not widely used and understood. In most cases
this is not due to lack of quality and usefulness of those Document & Tool projects, but due to a lack of
understanding of where they fit in an Enterprise’s security ecosystem or in the Web Application Development
Life-cycle.
This event aims to change that by providing an insight into the issues of cybercrime, its impact and detection
and a selection of mature and enterprise ready approaches together with practical examples of how to use
them.

 

Further details of the event can also be found at: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/EUTour2013