USENIX 1998
September 1st, 1998 by Aaron Mauck in
Each year, the USENIX organization (http://www.usenix.org/) puts on a technical conference dealing with UNIX and other UNIX-like systems. This year they had an emphasis on free or Open Source operating systems, primarily Linux and *BSD. The conference was held in New Orleans, Louisiana from June 15th to the 20th.
Many day-long tutorials were offered on Monday and Tuesday including “Inside the Linux Kernel” by Stephen Tweedie, one of the EXT2 developers, and several talks on Networking and Security. I attended “Hot Topics in System Administration”, given by Treni Hein and Evi Nemeth. They covered many topics including Samba, Packet Filtering and IPv6.
I found it refreshing to see a vendor exposition (albeit a small one) comprised completely of UNIX-friendly companies. O'Reilly was there, displaying all of their titles for sale at 20% off. Needless to say, this made it one of the most popular booths. Most of the faces were familiar: Red Hat, Linux International, InfoMagic, the three heads of BSD and others. Among the unexpected participants was the FBI, just a short distance from the Free Software Foundation. The whole atmosphere of the exposition was quite relaxed, without the hectic feel of COMDEX and other large industry trade shows.
Each evening offered several talks by different people on a wide range of subjects. I caught “The State of Linux” talk by Linus Torvalds on Thursday afternoon. He set Aug/Sep 98 as a hopeful release date for the 2.2 kernel. Another event that took place every evening was the “Birds of a Feather” (BOF) meetings, which were designed as a place for people with common interests to come together and discuss their ideas and goals. It was also a great place to rub shoulders with some of the “big names” in the UNIX community, such as Keith Bolstic, Eric Allman and Jon “maddog” Hall.
What UNIX conference would be complete without a terminal room? Luckily, Earthlink and openBSD donated machines and bandwidth and created a room with thirty or so machines running openBSD, connected to a T1.
If I were to do it all over again (and I most definitely want to), I would spend more time planning what I want to learn. I was a bit overwhelmed by the sheer number of talks/events, and therefore found it difficult to focus on exactly what I wanted to get from the experience—I was constantly spreading myself too thin. For any UNIX, Linux, BSD etc. lover, USENIX is a must at least once in a lifetime. It is a very friendly and co-operative environment and has definitely earned its reputation as one of the hubs of the computing community.
Special Magazine Offer -- 2 Free Trial Issues!
Receive 2 free trial issues of Linux Journal as well as instant online access to current and past issues. There's NO RISK and NO OBLIGATION to buy. CLICK HERE for offer
Linux Journal: delivering readers the advice and inspiration they need to get the most out of their Linux systems since 1994.
Sorry, offer available in the US only. International orders, click here.
Subscribe now!
The Latest
Featured Videos
Linux Journal Live - Oct 9, 2008
October 9th, 2008 by Shawn Powers
The October 9, 2008 edition of Linux Journal Live! Associate Editor, Shawn Powers, and Kyle Rankin, "Hack and /" columnist and author of Knoppix Hacks, Linux Multimedia Hacks, Knoppix Pocket Reference and others, discuss Linux distributions.
Linux Journal Live - Oct 2, 2008
October 3rd, 2008 by Shawn Powers
The October 2, 2008 edition of Linux Journal Live! Associate Editor, Shawn Powers, and Steven Evatt, Online Development manager for The Houston Chronicle discuss surviving disaster with Linux.
Recently Popular
From the Magazine
November 2008, #175
There aren't many numbers that put the US national debt to shame, but here's one: 1,100,000,000,000,000. What's that? That's how many floating-point operations per second the Roadrunner supercomputer at Las Alamos can perform. That's about 100 FLOPS per dollar of US debt (unfortunately, the debt is winning the second derivative race). Read the article about Roadrunner in this month's High Performance Computing issue of LJ.
Along with that, find out how to program the Cell processor and how to use CUDA with your NVIDIA GPU. Also in this issue: Mr HandS (aka Kyle Rankin) gives us a few tips on using Compiz, Chef Marcel shows you how to get blogging off your plate quicker, Mick Bauer talks about Samba security, Dan Sawyer interviews Cory Doctrow and Doc talks about how information technology can affect democracy and fix the national debt (just kidding about that last part). That and more for your reading pleasure in this month's Linux Journal.

Delicious
Digg
Reddit
Newsvine
Technorati








linux
On October 2nd, 2007 enigma variations download (not verified) says:
is Who McVoy? Larry Thanks.
Post new comment