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Saturday, 13th May

Break

13:30 - 14:15
Break

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:30 - 14:15
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:30 - 14:15
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:30 - 14:15
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:30 - 14:15
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:30 - 14:15
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


Check in

09:00 - 09:15
Check in

    OSCAL Team
    Check in

Check in


Opening Speech

09:15 - 09:30
Opening Speech

    OSCAL Team
    Opening Speech

Opening Speech of OSCAL 2017


Open Source Design

10:30 - 11:00
Usability Testing for Open Source Software

    Renata Gegaj (Developer GNOME)
    Talk

This talk will reveal the very basics of what usability is and how it is measured. Renata will show a simple way to test usability of open source software with minimal resources, to get useful feedback for you and usable interfaces for users.


Open Workflow

10:30 - 11:00
Building Applications Doesn't Mean Writing It All From Scratch

    Brian Exelbierd (Engineer Fedora)
    Lecture

In school we are taught to write everything. Modern applications are built on the backs of great frameworks, let's explore the process.  This talk-shop will walk students through the process of growing an idea from a seed into a full fledged application while focusing on leveraging existing frameworks and code as much as possible.  The example will be based on a proposed documentation publishing system for Fedora.  The concept grows from "Publish AsciiDoc" to have an automatically publishing container based pipeline for maintaining a documentation website.  Technologies used will mostly include: AsciiDoc, AsciiDoctor, AsciiBinder, OpenShift, and Jenkins.


14:15 - 14:45
Firefox DevTools Deep Dive

    Alex Lakatos (Developer Mozilla)
    Talk

We'll learn to use the Firefox Developer Tools like a regular web developer so we can Inspect The Web. This activity will allow people to get a better understanding of the DevTools baked into Firefox and what they can do to increase their proficiency.This is a hands on talk, no slides attached, we're going to cover the Page Inspector - with CSS, Selectors and Animations - the Console, Debugger, Storage Inspector and then we'll showcase the Firefox Developer Edition.


Privacy and Policy Making

11:30 - 12:30
CryptoParty: Rip off the bandaid!

    Marie Gutbub ( Courage Foundation)
    Lecture

Protect your privacy. NSA, GHCQ, BND, Google, Facebook & co are watching you. You know it, you have heard it over and over again, and there's probably a little voice in your head that tells you that you should do something about it. But what? Get all the tools, encrypt all the things, use TOR, PGP, OTR and the rest. And that is where you stop listening to that voice in your head. Only few of these tools are easy to understand, to get started with, and to use on a daily basis. User pain level: too high. This is why movements like CryptoParty exist - and it shouldn't be the case. CryptoParty must die!


12:30 - 13:30
Panel

    Italo Vignoli (Founder The Document Foundation), Matthias Kirschner (President Free Software Foundation Europe)
    Panel

Free and open source software and open data in public administration.


Free Software

09:30 - 10:30
Empowering people to control technology needs persistance. This talks shows why it is worth doing that work.

    Matthias Kirschner (President Free Software Foundation Europe)
    Lecture

The long way to empower people to control technology Software is deeply involved in all aspects of our lives. It is important that this technology empowers rather than restricts us. Free Software gives everybody the rights to use, understand, adapt and share software.  These rights help support other fundamental rights like freedom of speech, freedom of press and privacy.The Free Software Foundation Europe is a charity that empowers users to control technology by:- helping individuals and organisations to understand how Free Software  contributes to freedom, transparency, and self-determination.- enhancing users' rights by abolishing barriers to Free Software adoption.- Encouraging people to use and develop Free Software.- Providing resources to enable everyone to further promote Free Software in  Europe.                             In this talk Matthias will talk about how he joined the FSFE, highlight theimportance of Free Software for society, give some examples of the FSFE's work from the past 15 years, and show how you as individual or organisation can work with us the FSFE for software freedom.


09:30 - 10:30
Let’s improve Nextcloud

    Jan-Christoph Borchardt (Designer Next Cloud & open Source Design)
    Workshop

Nextcloud is open source software for file sync & share, calendars, contacts, video calls and much more. We are a welcoming community where you can easily get involved – so let’s get you started! :)


10:30 - 11:30
Fedora packaging workshop with Copr

    Zacharias Mitzelos (Developer Fedora Project)
    Workshop

We will discover Copr, create a demo package and push it to Fedora's easy-to-use automatic build system, using Copr to host our package and make it publicly available.


11:00 - 11:30
Introduction of Servo

    Boris Budini (Sysadmin Open Labs Hackerspace)
    Lightning Talk

Servo is a web browser engine written in rust programming language. Hence it adapts to the features of the rust which are high performances, memory safety; no data races, automatic memory management and concurrency built in. Servo is a project sponsored by Mozilla, it is also an open source free software project which anyone can contribute towards it. The main aim of servo is to create an architecture that uses parallelism in multiple ways whilst preventing bugs/ security issues that can end up affecting memory management and data races.Servo aims to parallelism as much as possible as servo aims for high performance and safety. What sets Servo apart from other engines, such as Google's Blink or Microsoft's Edge Html, is its use of parallelism, which sees tasks distributed across multiple processor cores.


11:30 - 12:00
Web backends for native frontends

    Riccardo Iaconelli (Developer KDE)
    Talk

Frameworks such as Meteor.js are simplifying and streamlining the user experience and create fast and responsive interfaces on the web. Why have traditional applications completely missed out on this trand? With the help of Qt, we can change this situation.At the end of the talk the attendees will know how to create multiplatform applications (for desktop AND mobile) using only native APIs: those applications will communicate a remote backend just like they were Javascript code running in the browser.


11:30 - 12:30
Migrating to LibreOffice

    Italo Vignoli (Founder The Document Foundation)
    Lecture

LibreOffice migration protocol, as suggested by The Document Foundation to organization deploying LibreOffice.


11:30 - 12:30
Marketing Automation with Mautic

    Elvis Plaku (Digital marketer SfidaBiznesi)
    Workshop

How to use Mautic to implement marketing automation for your projects.


12:00 - 12:30
Sync outside the Box – easy self-hosting for everyone!

    Jan-Christoph Borchardt (Designer Next Cloud & open Source Design)
    Talk

Keeping your data safe is increasingly important in a world of Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple & co. That’s why we develop Nextcloud to be as easy and useful as the proprietary platforms – but with you in control.


12:30 - 13:30
Internets in the Mountains (or strange cities)

    Ardian Haxha (Developer Fedora Project)
    Workshop

You may find your self travelling to different places around the world like just right now, you are visiting a conference in a city you have never been before, or you decide to go to the mountains. You find yourself in a situation that a map could really help or you need to fix something in your code and you just forgot that syntax for this big npm module that isn't even installed? This topic could give you some tips and tricks. A workshop focused in offline-first internet. 


12:30 - 13:30
Reproducible builds

    Chris Lamb (Developer Debian)
    Lecture

Whilst anyone can inspect the source code of free software for malicious flaws, most Linux distributions provide binary (or "compiled") packages to end users.The motivation behind "reproducible" builds is to allow verification that no flaws have been introduced during this compilation process by promising identical binary packages are always generated from a given source.This prevents against the installation of backdoor-introducing malware on developers' machines - an attacker would need to simultaneously infect or blackmail all developers attempting to reproduce the build.This talk will focus heavily on how exactly software can fail to be reproducible, the tools, tests & specifications we have written to fix & diagnose issues, as well as the many amusing "fails" in upstream's code that have been unearthed by this process. In addition, you will learn what to avoid in your own software as well as the future efforts in the Reproducible Builds arena.


13:00 - 13:30
Doing open source the Red Hat way

    Sopot Çela ( Red hat)
    Talk

This talk will describe what it means to do Open Source engineering while working for Red Hat. We will go into the details of the challenges, cooperation and satisfaction that make up my daily work.We'll look at it both from the high-level philosophical point of view of "why the hell does Red Hat spend salary money on free stuff!?" to the low-level detail of what I do all day.I'll also provide a quick introduction to how I ended up from the desks of the Technical University of Tirana (Universiteti Politeknik i Tiranës) to the open source engineering teams of Red Hat.


14:15 - 15:15
Debian Hams, GNU Radio and Software Defined Radio

    Daniel Pocock (Software Engineer Debian project)
    Workshop

A brief introduction to Ham Radio, SDR and the RTL-SDR dongles with Debian.


14:15 - 15:15
phpList Workshop

    Suela Palushi ( phpList)
    Workshop

An overview on phpList, the open source email marketing system


15:15 - 16:15
Getting Started with QGIS

    Besfort Guri (Founder FLOSSK / OpS - IN)
    Workshop

This workshop is designed to help users who are new to QGIS to find their way around, and to understand some of its main features. It doesn't assume an understanding of GIS, though if you are familiar with GIS you'll be able to move through much quicker.


15:45 - 16:45
The IT of another Europe, Building systems we can trust again

    Arjen Kamphuis (IT Security Advisor Beehive 4.2 / Hack42)
    Lecture

12 year before Snowden the EU already knew they should not trust US tech but chose to make itself more dependent on it anyway. We need a radical change in the way we select the tech that runs our society.Without reliably working software and data-processing the modern world stops working. From the supermarkets where you get your food to the electricity or gas that heats it up to the water that cleans your plate afterwards; IT is everywhere but still has a long way to go to reach the reliability of older technologies (such as the basic elements of the powergrid). IT is still developing very rapidly and new developments are stacked on top of slightly older ones. So on the one hand we now have 'smart' thermostats you can control via an app but on the other hand those thermostats can easily be hacked and then operated, in their millions, by someone else. When these same technologies are applied to industrial systems things risk start to look more like a bad Hollywood thriller scenario and less like the paper wisdom of ITIL-certification courses.The Stuxnet case and the revelations by Edward Snowden have shown how fundamental the problems (and challenges to fix them) are. Most systems and platforms in common use are, by design untrustworthy in ways that cannot be fixed barring regime change in the US. While a lot more work needs to be done on detecting breaches of security sooner this does not really solve any problems, just cleans up the mess afterward.In order to re-gain trust in systems because we can *trust* them we need to be willing to move away from proprietary systems and 'cloud' computers under the control of foreign powers. Even the most common used hardware platforms and CPU-architectures need to be up for discussion and replacement by more trustworthy alternatives. Nothing is irreplaceable and by replacing what we know we cannot trust by things we can a future of computing under control of citizens is possible.


16:15 - 17:15
Lecture and Demoing about MozVR (Mozilla VR)

    Arion Banishta (Programmer FLOSSK / Mozilla)
    Workshop

I'm going to start with a light lecture that shows to people what Virtual Reality is, when and why it was invented and thing related with that and than continue with a lecture about MozVR and at the and a demoing for all attendees about WebVR / MozVR


16:15 - 16:45
Managing a Classroom of Computers with Edubuntu and LTSP

    Dashamir Hoxha (Computer Engineer Canadian Institute of Technology (CIT))
    Lightning Workshop

Edubuntu and LTSP can help a teacher to manage easily the computers of a class room. In this workshop we will see how.


Sunday, 14th May

Open Source Design

13:45 - 14:45
Design & Development with Bootstrap

    Albert Lekaj (Designer Open Data Kosovo), Adelina Hajrizi (Developer Techstitution)
    Workshop

Being one of the most used Open-Source website building platforms, Bootstrap revolutionized the way we design & develop websites. The workshop will cover Bootstraps core features like responsiveness, the 12 column grid and their order, the components, the way it handles JavaScript and how to customize Bootstrap for your own purposes. The workshop will also cover the design thinking & doing in Bootstrap with its iconography, typography, colors and how to combine them to come up with a better looking and user friendly design.


Security

14:15 - 16:15
Crypto Party

    Marie Gutbub ( Courage Foundation), Arjen Kamphuis (IT Security Advisor Beehive 4.2 / Hack42)
    Workshop

A workshop dedicated to online security in today's digital world


16:45 - 17:15
Beyond the Security ( Offline Computers Attack )

    Geron Imeraj (Network Administrator VIVO Communication)
    Talk

My topic is being referred to TEMPEST. TEMPEST it's an complicated attack of offline computers using EMF. It is referring to spying on information systems through leaking emanations, including unintentional radio or electrical signals, sounds, and vibrations. TEMPEST covers both methods to spy upon others and also how to shield equipment against such spying. The protection efforts are also known as emission security (EMSEC), which is a subset of communications security (COMSEC). The NSA methods for spying upon computer emissions are classified, but some of the protection standards have been released by either the NSA or the Department of Defense.Protecting equipment from spying is done with distance, shielding, filtering, and masking.The TEMPEST standards mandate elements such as equipment distance from walls, amount of shielding in buildings and equipment, and distance separating wires carrying classified vs. unclassified materials, filters on cables etc.


Break

13:00 - 13:45
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:00 - 13:45
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:00 - 13:45
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:00 - 13:45
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


13:00 - 13:45
Break!

    OSCAL Team
    Break

Lunch time!


Open Workflow

14:15 - 14:45
Why your community need a glossary

    Daniele Scasciafratte (CTO Codeat)
    Talk

There are many things that can help you your community on the localization and the glossary is the best way to start and create a team!

Discovery with the experience of the WordPress Polyglots team!


Check in

09:45 - 10:00
Check in

    OSCAL Team
    Check in

Check in


Free Software

11:00 - 12:00
Designing For The Revolution (of Open Source)

    Brennan Novak (Co-founder Open Source Design)
    Lecture

Technologists often boast that "Thing X" will be a revolution that will change society. While the internet, personal computers, the world wide web, smart phones, tablets, and virtual reality are changing society at an incredible pace, there is another revolution which helps make all of those revolutions possible- that is open source and free software. However, FOSS projects and communities have always lacked one thing: designers. Luckily, this is starting to change, and like all revolutions, in order to succeed in shifting power balances- strategies and tactics are needed. This talk will explore how open source designers, developers, and makers can unite and continue to change the world.


11:00 - 12:00
Using Moodle in Education

    Dashamir Hoxha (Computer Engineer Canadian Institute of Technology (CIT))
    Workshop

Moodle is powerful tool that can support the teaching and learning process in universities and high schools. We will see how to install, manage and use it.


11:00 - 12:00
Tom's super easy way to make basic user interfaces in Python

    Thomas Levine
    Lecture

Horetu exposes Python functions as other user interfaces. When applied to a function, horetu automatically constructs corresponding command-line interfaces, web interfaces, IRC bots, graphical interfaces, and configuration files. In addition to being a very practical tool, it is interesting because its implementation demonstrates the capabilities of Python function objects and the merits of following conventions: Horetu can construct powerful interfaces and detailed documentation from functions that were written with no intent of being called with Horetu.


12:00 - 13:00
Mutants, tests and zombies

    Alexander Todorov (QA Red Hat)
    Lecture

Mutation testing is a technique in which the software under test is modified in order to verify how good your test suite is. I will introduce this technique, share practical examples in Python & Ruby and show a few bugs which were exposed during testing.  I will also give a few hints about getting started with mutation testing in practice.


12:00 - 13:00
CoreOS bridges the clouds - deploying Kubernetes on multiple platforms.

    Alexandru Somesan (Developer CoreOS)
    Lecture

CoreOS Tectonic enables deploying same configuration Kubernetes clusters on multiple cloud providers. All based on open-source technologies.


13:45 - 14:15
Introduction to Webassembly

    Gabriele Falasca (Developer Mozilla)
    Talk

From webassembly.org: "WebAssembly or wasm is a new portable, size- and load-time-efficient format suitable for compilation to the web".  This talk introduces this stuff and illustrates how to permit to run binary code directly from browser.


13:45 - 14:15
AWB

    Marios Magioladitis (Developer Wikimedia Community User Group Greece)
    Lightning Workshop

AutoWikiBrowser (AWB) is a semi-automated MediaWiki editor designed to make tedious or repetitive editing tasks quicker and easier. We will make a hands on introduction of its features. We will answer questions and discuss ideas of how improve its functionality.


14:15 - 15:15
Claim control of your Docker images

    Dimitar Zahariev
    Lecture

We'll talk about Docker and the challenges of running a local repository. We'll continue with presentation of Portus as a reliable solution


14:45 - 15:15
What is the Core Infrastructure Initiative and what can it do foryou

    Marcus Streets (Programme Director Linux Foundation)
    Talk

A look at the history of the CII, from its foundation as a response to Heartbleed to today. A look at the projects it supports and a description of how to apply for funding.


15:15 - 16:15
WordPress Plugin Boilerplate Powered 2.0

    Daniele Scasciafratte (CTO Codeat)
    Workshop

Create a plugin for WordPress with Composer and many other libraries with a code generator in a nutshell.

Seems a boring topic but can speed up your knowledge of WordPress with live coding of a plugin from the speaker


15:15 - 16:15
Introducing the Lua scripting language

    Marc Balmer (Developer micro systems)
    Lecture

Lua is a scripting language popular in the game industry, automation and many other areas.  This talk will give an overview of the Language, it's goals and implementation.


15:15 - 16:15
Introduction to GNUemacs

    John Sturdy (Senior Automation Engineer ARM)
    Lecture

GNUemacs is one of the earliest pieces of the GNU system, which started the Free Software revolution.  This is an introduction to using Emacs for editing and everything else, with explanations of some of the key concepts; mostly as a user, but with some mention of customizing and programming it.


16:15 - 17:15
Transforming Open Source Python SDK Tools Service to the Google Cloud. Case Study Analysis: Google App Engine Launcher

    Orges Cico (Developer Metropolitan Incubator)
    Workshop

The topic involves addressing the possibility for transforming most of the open source sdk of Google cloud into web services fully integrated with the cloud infrastructure. This would promote further software development and chances to exploit existing services with an open community to collaborate with  such as Google Developer Experts (https://developers.google.com/experts/) . Attendees should interpret this as an opportunity example into the open source development oriented towards cloud systems supported by Linux based Virtual Machines.


16:15 - 16:45
Free Real-Time Communications with Free Software

    Daniel Pocock (Software Engineer Debian project)
    Lecture

Proponents of free software are frequently asked "Can we replace Skype, Viber, Twitter and Facebook?".  Is this the right question and how does it relate to free software development today and in the future? Pocock talks about the social consequences of this issue, looks at some of the successes we have had with examples based on Debian, some of the challenges that remain and ways that people can help either as developers or end users.


16:15 - 17:15
Controlling all the things with ManageIQ

    Roman Blanco ( ManageIQ)
    Lecture

ManageIQ is an open-source cloud management platform capable of managing containers, virtual machines, networks, storage from a single pane of glass. As it supports a huge scale of providers, it is a good example of the collaboration across open-source communities. This talk introduces the project and demonstrates some of its features.


16:15 - 17:15
Game Development in jMonkey engine

    Engjell Rraklli (Entrepreneur UnniTech)
    Lecture

I am going to introduce the flagship game engine for game development in java. jMonkey has been around since 2002 and now is getting its next stable release. With lots of cool features to come, its a great choice for indie game developers to start their game development career. In the session I am going to explain in a few words what jMonkey history is. After that I will explain its features, make a presentation of its demos and last but not least, make a presentation of a demo project developed by me.


17:15 - 17:45
Intro to Rust

    Boris Budini (Sysadmin Open Labs Hackerspace)
    Talk

Rust is a systems programming language that runs blazingly fast, prevents segfaults, and guarantees thread safety. Let's talk about that!