Annual Linux Showcase Free Registration
po8 writes "The 2001 Annual Linux Showcase (ALS)
is offering free registration
until October 15, to try to increase attendance.
If you're in the Oakland, CA area, perfect! If not, plane
tickets are really cheap right now." In the past, this has been the Altanta Linux Showcase, which was always one of my favorite shows to attend. If you can make it, definitely check out - run with USENIX, it tends to be a more programmer/developer oriented show, rather then marketing.
I've been to a few of these things. For the most part they are kind of interesting but I'm not as hard core as most of the attendees. Casual Linux users would be lost. I kinda like the free swag though.
icksnay on hacking my boxsnay.
In the past, this has been the Altanta Linux Showcase
I think I'd prefer to fly to Atlanta where the CDC is. That way, I wouldn't have to wait for my swabs to be overnighted for the anthrax test. Just kidding. I'd really love to go, but I'd miss my youngest's birthday.
We know that many of you have been impacted by the economic downturn...
Yes! Or there are those of us who never were (financially) well-sponsored enough to get into things like this, it's nice to see us fitting in with the crowd.
spacefem.com
As a person who has found themself recently single I would love to go to a place with lots of cleanly shaved Linux useing females.
/burn karma
Ascii artist &
I just took a look at the website and it looks to be a very technical conference, rather than one of the high publicity big flashy conferences that I'm used to seeing advertised.
I think that if Linux is to be more widely accepted by people then it needs to have conferences that appeal less to technies and sysadmins and more to executives who can go to these seminars and be wowed in the same way that they are wowed by Windows at Microsoft conferences.
While I know this is meant to be a technical meet, I'm just saying that in general Linux needs more things like WinHEC (by Microsoft) to get the kind of support that it needs to really go mainstream. I wonder if all the large Linux OEMs could work together on something like this to show that Linux is a viable alternative for corporate platforms.
k, just call me a n00b or something, but is it totally free as in i lose $0, or is the cost of registering $0, but each day still has multi houndred dollar costs?
if someone replies to this, then include the above statement, so people will understand since i shouldn't be modded up.
Only dead fish swim with the stream...
Maybe the problem with attendance is the fact that they moved yet another conference to the Left Coast.
Instead of trying cram another tech event into California, why not try and fill the void that needs filling, namely a worthwhile Linux conference in the Southeast.
Why would I want to attend a show that Usenix hijacked from Atlanta?
Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
Even better, send this conference to NYC. We need the dollars right now, shops are closing left and right.
Because of the attacks we've lost countless number of vistor, not to mention trade shows and
the traffic that they bring
I'm not trying to be greedy (the whole country is in a slump right now) but an injection like this could seriously help out the local economy (and my favorite computer store that is being forced to close due to lack of business).
Every little bit helps.
..otherwise it's just lame to have LWE in August and then ALS 2 months later...and right across the bay.
Great, another Oakland vs San Francisco contest. Did Mayor Jerry Brown cook this one up as well?
I can see the headlines on the brochures now:
"Come meet all the sharks and carpetbaggers, reminisce about the good ol' days when it was still fun, and learn about the new and exciting ways they make money off your work!"
No thanks. I think i'll pass on this one.
Bowie J. Poag
I would love to go, as I have for the past 2 years, but the move to the west coast makes it impossible.
Why do we need more shows in California and less in the rest of the country is my question... Seems to me Atlanta was pretty well located for the east coast, which has few opportunities like this.
Eep. I dunno about you guys, but you'd have to pay me to go to Oakland... some scary stuff going on there...
I totally agree with AC on this:
:-(
-snip-
From: Alan Cox
To: alschair@usenix.org
Subject: Resignation from ALS, Skylarov affair...
Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2001 12:31:02 +0100 (BST)
Cc: editor@lwn.net, editors@newsforge.com, gnu@eff.org
I hereby tender my resignation to the Usenix ALS committee.
With the arrest of Dimitry Sklyarov it has become apparent that it is not
safe for non US software engineers to visit the United States. While he was
undoubtedly chosen for political reasons as a Russian is a good example for
the US public the risk extends arbitarily further.
Usenix by its choice of a US location is encouraging other programmers, many
from eastern european states hated by the US government to take the same
risks. That is something I cannot morally be part of. Who will be the next
conference speaker slammed into a US jail for years for committing no crime?
Are usenix prepared to take the chance it will be their speakers ?
Until the DMCA mess is resolved I would urge all non US citizens to boycott
conferences in the USA and all US conference bodies to hold their
conferences elsehere.
I appreciate that this problem is not of Usenix making, but it must be addressed
Alan Cox
-snip-
And the USofA is now even more of a big brother state that when this was written
ALS used to held right around the Networld+Interop show.
Now it seems that all the Linux shows are in either NY/Boston or SF Bay area.
Bring back the Atlanta Linux Showcase.
there are 3 kinds of people:
* those who can count
* those who can't
Well, there is an Amtrak station not too far away in Oakland, and Amtrak does offer a lot more leg & laptop room than any airline.
That makes as much sense as denouncing Amnesty International because they work in countries that torture people.
-- Will program for bandwidth
ALS - when it was the ATLANTA Linux Showcase - was a techie's dream. A small show with lots of Birds of a Feather sessions and immediate access to the folks actually doing things. I attended the past three years. Last year I got to go to the OpenSource Conference in Monterey but found ALS more enjoyable.
But I won't travel to Oakland for ALS. There are too many other shows competing. In Atlanta they were the only show around and the quality showed. Atlanta is also a day-trip for me whereas Oakland requires effort.