May Issue of Daemon News' EZine Released
GMan00 writes "Daemon News' latest May EZine has been released online.
This issue covers BSDCan which was held last weekend in Ottawa, Canada.
As you'll see from the DN EZine, the conference was a great success, with some 170 developers, sysadmins and end-users from around the world. Some travelled as far away as Japan, the Ukraine and the Netherlands.
Speakers included Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino of the IETF and a lead authority on IPv6 besides being the NetBSD Security Officer, Theo de Raadt of OpenBSD, Poul-Henning Kamp, the creator of the FreeBSD GEOM Disk i/o subsystem, and Robert Watson, the founder of the TrustedBSD Project.
Dan Langille, the brain behind FreeBSDDiary and FreshPorts, organized the conference and is planning a repeat performance next May."
Of course BSD is unpopular here. Slashdot has grown into site full of frustrated, disgruntled people who sit at work on Microsoft Windows machines. They work off their frustration by joining the "Linux" subculture, without actually holding that many beliefs or philosophy in common with the people who made the software.
:Slashdot editors telling us that the logs show a majority of MS users; the popularity of Wine, Samba, and OpenOffice; the trust in big corporations like AOL/Netscape, Sun, and IBM despite their having little or nothing in common with what founded this community.
The evidence of this is everywhere
Since BSD isn't a "cool" part of the Linux subculture (except for the occasional person who decides Linux is too popular to be "cool"), it just doesn't get much attention.
But what I want to know, is why was this sucker held in Canada?
As for why Ottawa, well, I live here. Of course I'd hold it there. Location, price, and accessibility are important.
I wouldn't have thought Ottawa the hotbed of BSD hacking.
Your statements seems to portray the requirement that conferences only be held where the developers are. That's not true at all.