From contact at everythingopen.au Sun Dec 17 13:58:09 2023 From: contact at everythingopen.au (Everything Open) Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2023 13:58:09 +1100 Subject: [Linux-aus] Everything Open 2024: Registrations now open and 1st Keynote Announcement Message-ID: Everything Open 2024 is delighted to announce our first keynote speaker and registrations for Everything Open 2024 is now available ## About Geoff Huston Geoff Huston AM is the Chief Scientist at the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC), where he undertakes research on topics associated with Internet infrastructure, internet protocol (IP) technologies, and address distribution policies. Geoff will be presenting a keynote exploring how the Internet has changed in the five decades since its inception. It?s bigger, faster, cheaper - but oh so different to what we imagined! Geoff Huston played a critical role in bringing the Internet to Australia in the 1980s and 1990s. While the Internet was still in its infancy in the US, he was able to complete the construction of a new and rapidly growing network within a few months. In 1989 Geoff began work at the Australian Vice Chancellor?s Committee with the direction to build a national academic and research network. In just over one year, every Australian university and major research institution was connected to the country?s first ISP, the Australian Academic and Research Network. The project quickly expanded to support the entire national Internet sector, and within five years this network became Australia?s largest private data network. He has worked for the largest Australian communications service provider (Telstra) in senior engineering, architecture and research roles assisting with the large-scale deployment of the Internet across Australia and as a transit service provider in the Asia Pacific region. He is author of a number of Internet-related books, and was a member of the Internet Architecture Board from 1999 until 2005, as well as chairing a number of Working Groups in the Internet Engineering Task Force. He served on the Board of Trustees of the Internet Society from 1992 until 2001, and served as the chair of the Board in 1998 ? 1999. Geoff was inducted as an inaugural member of The Internet Hall of Fame for his crucial work to get Australia online in the late 1980s, and in 2020 was made a member in the General Division of the Order of Australia (AM) for his role as an Internet pioneer in Australia. ## About the Keynote Today?s Internet is so different from what we had imagined it would be some forty years ago. It connects billions of devices, moves petabytes of data, it operates trunk circuits at terabits per second and the cost per delivered byte continues to drop. If this was the ultimate promise of Moore?s Law and the silicon revolution, then the Internet is living that dream. But it?s not what we thought it would be. The rise of content distribution networks and the model of content and service replication has brought about massive changes to the Internet?s architecture. By bringing service and content close to users, the network is bigger, faster and cheaper, but it?s also completely different to the Internet we started with. This presentation will explore these differences and what they mean to the future evolution of the Internet. ## Register now for Everything Open 2024! Register now to attend Everything Open 2024, in beautiful Gladstone, tropical north Queensland. We have a range of ticket prices suitable for most budgets, and have compiled information on travel to, and accommodation in Gladstone, as well as information on what you can do while you?re here. We?re looking forward to seeing you in April 2024! If you have questions please contact the Organising Team via email at contact at everythingopen.au. From russell at coker.com.au Sun Dec 31 14:33:27 2023 From: russell at coker.com.au (Russell Coker) Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2023 14:33:27 +1100 Subject: [Linux-aus] FOSS related book club Message-ID: <1986790.8hb0ThOEGa@cupcakke> Some years ago we had a group read the book Little Brother by Cory Doctorow and meet up to discuss it. That went well and I think we should have more of the same but with meeting/discussion over the Internet which means no risk of Covid (which is still a thing) and avoids geographic constraints. My idea is to focus on near-future SciFi books that can correlate to free software development that we do (like Little Brother) and books that are less immediate but correspond to the big picture of why we support FOSS development (apart from it being fun that is). Also we can have meetings based around multiple short stories or novelettes that are noteworthy. My initial plan is to run it as part of Flounder because the scope of Flounder encompasses that sort of thing and because it's about virtual meetings. I'm thinking of Cory Doctorow, George Orwell, Vernor Vinge, Ann Leckie, and Ursula K. Le Guin as possible authors - or others who write with similar perspectives. I BCC'd Matt Cengia who chaired the Little Brother meeting in question. Matt you are welcome to chair such meetings if you have the time, you did a great job at the Little Brother meeting. https://doc.coker.com.au/fiction/free-short-stories/ The above page has links to short stories that I think are good, we could discuss them at book club meetings and also people who aren't interested in joining the club could just read them for fun. I think most people here would like those stories more than any anthology that they are likely to see in their local library. -- My Main Blog http://etbe.coker.com.au/ My Documents Blog http://doc.coker.com.au/