Attend the 16th Systems Administration Conference & Tutorial Program, sponsored by USENIX and SAGE --------------------- LISA'02 November 3-8, 2002 - Philadelphia, PA Take advantage of our early registration and student discounts! http://www.usenix.org/lisa02/ --------------------- Learn from master practitioners and noted Authors at over 35 technical tutorials. Topics include: * UNIX, Solaris, and Linux system administration * Performance tuning, disaster recovery planning, SANs, massive upgrades, user request management, and other service challenges * Monitoring, intrusion detection, firewalls, and Web security * DNS administration and practical wireless networking Hear practical solutions from expert speakers, including: - Keynote: Jim Reese, Chief Operations Engineer of Google, on Google's architecture and the challenges of running an Internet search service - Paul Vixie on Internet governance, peering, and legislation - Curtis Preston, backup guru, on streamlining backup and recovery - Len Sassaman on "the promise of privacy" - Tim Nagle of TRW on his years with the NSA Red Team - Daniel V. Klein on the constitutional and legal arguments against spam LISA'02 continues to provide an integrated experience for all attendees. In one place, you can: - Evaluate new approaches to automation, monitoring, security, and the evolving theory of system administration (among other topics) in the Refereed Paper sessions - Find people with similar interests or administrative problems at Birds-of-a-Feather sessions - Bring your perplexing technical questions to experts at LISA's unique "The Guru Is In" sessions - Explore the latest commercial innovations at the Vendor Exhibition Please join us in Philadelphia and lend your skills, experience, and opinions toward forging an exciting future for the profession. For complete program information, and to register visit: http://www.usenix.org/lisa02/ We look forward to seeing you in Philly! --- Send mail for the `bblisa' mailing list to `[EMAIL PROTECTED]'. Mail administrative requests to `[EMAIL PROTECTED]'.
