Presentations/April 2008 Technical Mini-conference

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Revision as of 16:36, 4 April 2008 by 18.85.19.51 (talk) (Link to talk slides.)
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We are having a "state of the OLPC" mini-conference at OLPC headquarters on April 3-4, 2008.

Sorry, we can't do real-time streaming (not for Thursday's talks, at least); we'll post video ASAP after the talks end.

Schedule

Thursday (April 3)

  • 12:30pm: "The Hand Key"
    • we discussed the hand key: implementing it might not be so hard!
  • 12:45pm: Ben Schwartz, "Frameworks for collaboration"
  • 1:30pm: Richard Smith, "Suspend/Resume"
  • 2:30pm: Chris Ball, "Power Management"
  • 3:30pm: break
  • 4:00pm: Eben Eliason, "New Activity management design" (Lightning talk)
  • 4:30pm: Eben Eliason, "Automatic transfer/update of activities" (Lightning talk)
  • 5:00pm: Edward Cherlin, "State of i18n" (Lightning talk)

Friday (April 4)

          Slides:  http://wiki.laptop.org/images/a/ac/April1pres.pdf
  • 2:30pm: Dafydd Harries, "Communications outlooks"
  • 3:30pm: break
  • 4:00pm: Martin Langhoff, "State of the schoolserver" (Lightning talk)
  • 4:30pm: Eben Eliason, "Toolbars & (no) tabs" (Lightning talk)
  • 5:00pm: Michael Stone, "State of security" (Lightning talk)
  • 5:30pm: Polychronis Ypodimatopoulos, "Cerebro" (Lightning talk)

Additional proposed talks

The following talks were proposed, but the proposer is unable to be present.

  • "Removable Activities" (Mikus Grinbergs) (related to datastore work and activity management)
  • "Sugar Performance" (Tomeu Vizoso)
  • "Hand-key scrolling" (Tomeu Vizoso) (also, "magnifying class" and "bulletin-board" keys)
  • (Better integration with legacy) "Desktop Applications" (Marco Gritti)
  • "Performance, Performance, Performance" (Mitch Bradley)

If anyone planning to be physically present wants to volunteer to prepare a brief (say 5-10 bullet points) outline of "current status" and "future directions" on these topics, we can schedule them in as Lightning talks. Alternatively, if the original proposers want to lead the discussion via teleconference, we can do that, too -- we should probably keep them in the "lightning talk" category because teleconferences tend to be very difficult for people to follow.

Presenter guidelines

For the 1-hour long talk categories, the goal should be ~25 minutes of "presentation" and ~25 minutes of "discussion" (interleaved if you like), with a 5 minute leg-stretch break between talks. For the lightning talks, let's aim at ~10 minutes of presentation, the same ~25 minutes of discussion, and 5 minutes of R&R.