Shachar Good am! no problem. I have a few lectures I can give; most lectures include a live demo
1 - Inbound and outbound content monitoring - "How Linux beats Windows hands down in protecting digital assets and foiling spyware" The talk will discuss one of the hottest areas in information security starting from a 40,000' level diving down to high-speed packet capture and session reassembly how do to high-speed detection and prevention of intrusion and extrusion. We will also compare a Linux solution to a Windows based appliance and discuss both technical and philosophical design differences between the two camps. 2 - SMB Business applications - 2a "How Linux and Aolserver are used for work hour reporting and project mgmt at some of the largest closed-source ISV's . The advantages and disadvantages of using the Openacs framework for SMB backoffice business applications. 2b "Why CRM doesnt have to be a million dollar project - or why pay for Siebel's and Vantive's marketing budgets when an Open Source Lamp based solution will do the job for 1/10th the price, 4 - 10 common mistakes embedded Linux developers make (Joel Issacson) 5 -Finally, as a keynote - I can talk about the macro and regional (US != ISR) economic drivers for OSS and where I think it's going - integration of components, where VC's are investing in this area This is not as visionary as it seems - there is heckofa lot of activity on the ground and I should be able to do a live demo of ready-to-install stack. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Shachar Shemesh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Linux-IL" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 10:50 PM Subject: Go-linux - sortof call for lecturers > Hi all, > > While I know it's late (the conference itself is on December 22nd), I've > been asked to come up with ideas for lectures and lecturers in all Linux > related fields for the Go-Linux conference. Please send me your ideas, > and we'll try to sort through them and get the interesting stuff in. > > Please feel free to send me your stuff whether you are private or > commercial. Non of the lecturers that come through this particular door > will be asked to pay for their lectures. The flip side, of course, is > that we'll only accept lectures that we find interesting to the expected > audience to hear. If you feel you positively have to give notes, and am > willing to pay for your own time, I'm sure People&Computers' usual > marketing channels will be happy to accommodate you. > > Usual disclaimers - I do not commit to accepting anyone. Also, I'm > (personally) not yet sure what nature this year's conference is going to > be like. I have postponed all requests to publish this conference to > this list until this question is sorted out, so that I don't spam you. > If technical substance for this conference does not prove enough, it may > well be that there will be none this year. > > As you can understand from the timeframes, this is of some urgency. > There is no need for a full paper describing your lecture. A simple idea > of the type "Shachar should talk about his sterile cat's sex habits", > along with contact info for the proposed lecturer (if available), should > be quite sufficient. You are, of course, welcome to propose yourself as > a lecturer, but in this case contact details are non-optional (email and > phone number, with the later being optional for the hearing impaired). > The important thing is not to delay. > > Thanks, > Shachar > > -- > Shachar Shemesh > Lingnu Open Source Consulting ltd. > http://www.lingnu.com/ > > > ================================================================= > To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with > the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command > echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
