[static-web] Update GUADEC schedule.xml.
- From: Benjamin Berg <bberg src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [static-web] Update GUADEC schedule.xml.
- Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2016 14:09:03 +0000 (UTC)
commit b1b36df507ab1606ef918ddd6fe93ec594dbeb08
Author: Benjamin Berg <benjamin sipsolutions net>
Date: Tue Aug 2 16:08:53 2016 +0200
Update GUADEC schedule.xml.
guadec-2016/schedule.xml | 60 ++++++++++++++++++++++-----------------------
1 files changed, 29 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/guadec-2016/schedule.xml b/guadec-2016/schedule.xml
index fa8156d..0f603a0 100644
--- a/guadec-2016/schedule.xml
+++ b/guadec-2016/schedule.xml
@@ -1,26 +1,24 @@
-<schedule><version>1.0</version><conference><start>2016-08-11</start><days>4</days><timeslot_duration>00:15</timeslot_duration><title>GUADEC
2016</title><acronym>GUADEC2016</acronym></conference><day date="2016-08-11" end="2016-08-11T23:59:00+02:00"
index="1" start="2016-08-11T09:00:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1" /><room name="Room 2" /><room
name="Elsewhere"><event id="113"><subtitle /><abstract>Pre-registration meeting in the AKK beer garden (on
campus) and BBQ there. We will provide food, drinks are inexpensive but not free. Bring cash for
payment.</abstract><title>BBQ at
AKK</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>113-bbq_at_akk</slug><persons><person>AKK and GUADEC
Teams</person></persons><date>2016-08-11T19:00:00+02:00</date><start>19:00</start><type /><logo
/><duration>04:59</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="200"><subtitle /><abstract /><title>Workshops
</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>200-workshops</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-11T09:00:00+02:00</date><start>09:00</start><type
/><logo /><duration>09:00</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room></day><day date="2016-08-12" end="2016-08-12T23:00:00+02:00"
index="2" start="2016-08-12T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1"><event id="2"><subtitle
/><abstract>Flowgraphs are awesome. Like no other widget they feel intuitive, are straightforward to use.
+<schedule><version>1.0</version><conference><acronym>GUADEC2016</acronym><start>2016-08-11</start><title>GUADEC
2016</title><days>4</days><timeslot_duration>00:15</timeslot_duration></conference><day date="2016-08-11"
end="2016-08-11T23:59:00+02:00" index="1" start="2016-08-11T09:00:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1" /><room
name="Room 2" /><room name="Elsewhere"><event guid="6889f591-0803-5f0e-9a14-ce5cbaf806fe" id="113"><title>BBQ
at AKK</title><track /><duration>04:59</duration><type
/><date>2016-08-11T19:00:00+02:00</date><start>19:00</start><language>eng</language><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><abstract>Pre-registration meeting
in the AKK beer garden (on campus) and BBQ there. We will provide food, drinks are inexpensive but not free.
Bring cash for payment.</abstract><attachments /><links /><room>Elsewhere</room><subtitle
/><persons><person>AKK and GUADEC Teams</person></persons><slug>113-bbq_at_akk</slug></event><event guid=
"363bdbee-1372-5ff6-9c7f-56f62d93dbb4"
id="200"><title>Workshops</title><duration>09:00</duration><date>2016-08-11T09:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>09:00</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>200-workshops</slug></event></room></day><day date="2016-08-12" end="2016-08-12T23:00:00+02:00"
index="2" start="2016-08-12T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1"><event
guid="20b3fa66-1288-58a1-bb62-0c240c82e929" id="2"><title>Flow graphs in GNOME and
Gtk+</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T15:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>grindhold</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>15:30</start><abstract>Flow graphs are awesome. Like no other widget, they feel
intuitive and are straightforward to use.
-In this talk I will take you on a short tour that shows you where to find flow graphs in common Free
software.
+In this talk, you will be taken on a short tour that shows you where to find flow graphs in common Free
software.
-Then I will show you libgtkflow, a library built upon the GNOME stack that makes it easy for you to use flow
graphs in your own Gtk-based applications.
+Then, we will look at libgtkflow, a library built upon the GNOME stack that makes it easy for you to use
flow graphs in your own Gtk-based applications.
-After this I want to discuss the future use of flow-graphs in GNOME-related software.</abstract><title>Flow
graphs in GNOME and Gtk+</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>grindhold</person></persons><slug>2-flow_graphs_in_gnome_and_gtk</slug><start>15:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T15:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="7"><subtitle /><abstract>Many new terms have entered the GTK vocabulary the last year, like gadgets, css
nodes or box models.
+After this we will discuss the future use of flow graphs in GNOME-related software.</abstract><links
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>2-flow_graphs_in_gnome_and_gtk</slug></event><event guid="fb5e3081-c1f5-5657-9abb-b2ce8a0c4008"
id="7"><title>Inspector
Gadget</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T16:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Benjamin Otte</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>16:30</start><abstract>Many new terms have entered the GTK vocabulary the last
year, like gadgets, CSS nodes or box models.
-This talk will explain and showcase these new developments in GTK's rendering pipeline and attempt an
outlook into the future.</abstract><title>Inspector
Gadget</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Benjamin
Otte</person></persons><slug>7-inspector_gadget</slug><start>16:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T16:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="8"><subtitle /><abstract>Flatpak (previously xdg-app) is a new system for desktop application bundling
and deployment. It allows you to build an application once and then deploy on all linux distributions,
running in a sandboxed environment.
+This talk will explain and showcase these new developments in GTK's rendering pipeline and attempt an
outlook into the future.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle /><slug>7-inspector_gadget</slug></event><event
guid="21cd49d0-45c8-5a83-8c03-8b9a785627aa" id="8"><title>Flatpak status update and future
plans</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-12T11:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Alexander Larsson</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>11:00</start><abstract>Flatpak (previously xdg-app) is a new system for desktop
application bundling and deployment. It allows you to build an application once and then deploy on all Linux
distributions, running in a sandboxed environment.
-This talk will give a status update on where flatpak is as a project, and how Gnome is using it. Then it
will talk about future plans, focusing on what is needed going forward to make Gnome applications work well
in a sandboxed environment.</abstract><title>Flatpak status update and future
plans</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Alexander
Larsson</person></persons><slug>8-flatpak_status_update_and_future_plans</slug><start>11:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T11:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="19"><subtitle /><abstract>Major Linux distributions have a problem with WebKit security. Whereas major
desktop browsers push automatic security updates directly to users on a regular basis so that users don’t
have to worry about updates, Linux users are dependent on their distribut
ions to release updates. Well over 100 vulnerabilities that could allow remote code execution were fixed in
WebKit last year, so getting updates out to users is critical. This talk examines the disconnect between how
the WebKit project handles security issues upstream and how different major distributions do (or do not)
handle security issues, shows that WebKit security issues have widespread impact even for users who do not
use a WebKit-based web browser, and discusses the security consequences of the split between the original
WebKit API and WebKit2.</abstract><title>WebKit Security
Updates</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Michael
Catanzaro</person></persons><slug>19-webkit_security_updates</slug><start>15:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T15:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="28"><subtitle /><abstract>Structured logging is a handy feature of modern log systems, like journald.
GLib is growing functionality to allow applications to export log messages in structured form, which allows
developers and sysadmins to more easily search and sort log messages to find what they're looking for.
+This talk will give a status update on where Flatpak is as a project, and how GNOME is using it. Then it
will talk about future plans, focusing on what is needed going forward to make GNOME applications work well
in a sandboxed environment.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>8-flatpak_status_update_and_future_plans</slug></event><event
guid="e6d8beca-655a-514c-a0db-6f12614d40f0" id="19"><title>WebKit security
updates</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T15:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Michael Catanzaro</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>15:00</start><abstract>Major Linux distributions have a problem with WebKit
security. Whereas major desktop browsers push automatic security updates directly to users on a regular basis
so that users don’t have to worry about updates, Linux users are
dependent on their distributions to release updates. Well over 100 vulnerabilities that could allow remote
code execution were fixed in WebKit last year, so getting updates out to users is critical. This talk
examines the disconnect between how the WebKit project handles security issues upstream and how different
major distributions do (or do not) handle security issues, shows that WebKit security issues have widespread
impact even for users who do not use a WebKit-based web browser, and discusses the security consequences of
the split between the original WebKit API and WebKit2.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>19-webkit_security_updates</slug></event><event guid="f25ee534-b1a2-513e-b8cc-526f695d0153"
id="28"><title>A GLib look at structured
logging</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T17:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Philip Withn
all</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><description
/><start>17:00</start><abstract>Structured logging is a handy feature of modern log systems, like journald.
GLib is growing functionality to allow applications to export log messages in structured form, which allows
developers and sysadmins to more easily search and sort log messages to find what they're looking for.
-This talk will introduce the new APIs and give an overview of how applications and libraries should log in
the new world order.
+This talk will introduce the new APIs and give an overview of how applications and libraries should log in
the new world order.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>28-a_glib_look_at_structured_logging</slug></event><event guid="5b5c389e-170b-5bcf-9e4d-74f8ff49c677"
id="38"><title>GNOME Software: you'll never guess what comes
next</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-12T11:45:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Kalev Lember</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>11:45</start><abstract>GNOME Software is an project that started life as an
application installer, and over time picked up features such as updating system firmware, distribution
upgrades, installation of fonts, codecs, language packs, and handling RPM files and Flatpak bundles. With
screenshots, long descriptions and now user-submitted ratings
and reviews we're on parity with several other appstores like the Google play store and provide a fast,
stable and beautiful software center for Fedora. In this talk I will explain about how we built this beast,
show off some new features and also talk about the future. I'll allow lots of time for questions and comments.
-(Apologies for the talk title.)</abstract><title>A GLib look at structured
logging</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Philip
Withnall</person></persons><slug>28-a_glib_look_at_structured_logging</slug><start>17:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T17:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="38"><subtitle /><abstract>GNOME Software is an project that started life as an application installer, and
over time picked up features such as updating system firmware, distribution upgrades, installation of fonts,
codecs, language packs, and handling RPM files and Flatpak bundles. With screenshots, long descriptions and
now user-submitted ratings and reviews we're on parity with several other appstores like the Google play
store and provide a fast, stable and beautiful software center for Fedora. I
n this talk I will explain about how we built this beast, show off some new features and also talk about the
future. I'll allow lots of time for questions and comments.
-
-Notes: This is a talk that Richard Hughes is going to present at Flock and me at GUADEC. Also happy to do a
short version of it if a 25 minute slot works better schedule wise.</abstract><title>GNOME Software: you'll
never guess what comes next</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Kalev
Lember</person></persons><slug>38-gnome_software_youll_never_guess_what_comes_next</slug><start>11:45</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T11:45:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="101"><subtitle /><abstract>Lightning talks of Google Summer of Code and Outreachy
interns</abstract><title>Intern lightning talks</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><track /><slug>101-intern_lightning_talks</slug><persons><person>GSoC and Outreachy
Interns</person></persons><date>20
16-08-12T18:00:00+02:00</date><start>18:00</start><type>talk</type><logo
/><duration>01:00</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event
id="103"><subtitle /><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><title>Unconference
#1</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>103-unconference-1</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><date>2016-08-12T17:30:00+02:00</date><start>17:30</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event
id="109"><subtitle /><abstract>Despite what tablet- and phone-loving pundits say, the laptop is here to stay.
When a user wants to watch a movie on a train, they reach for the tablet first. But if they want to do
actual, real work, they still prefer the laptop.
+Notes: This is a talk that Richard Hughes is going to present at Flock and me at GUADEC. Also happy to do a
short version of it if a 25 minute slot works better schedule wise.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>38-gnome_software_youll_never_guess_what_comes_next</slug></event><event
guid="e92b8310-2623-54c4-be20-ce7391564083" id="101"><title>Intern lightning talks</title><track
/><duration>01:00</duration><type>talk</type><date>2016-08-12T18:00:00+02:00</date><start>18:00</start><language>eng</language><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><abstract>Lightning talks of
Google Summer of Code and Outreachy interns</abstract><attachments /><links /><room>Room 1</room><subtitle
/><persons><person>GSoC and Outreachy
Interns</person></persons><slug>101-intern_lightning_talks</slug></event><event
guid="343b5c9d-c4fa-5aa4-8563-1e271c788435" id="103"><title>Uncon
ference #1</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T17:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments
/><persons><person>to be announced</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><start>17:30</start><language>eng</language><links
/><subtitle /><slug>103-unconference-1</slug></event><event guid="41452287-6fc1-595a-a59a-12bd117de029"
id="109"><title>Confessions of a command line geek: Why I don't use GNOME but everyone else
should</title><duration>01:00</duration><date>2016-08-12T14:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments /><persons><person>Bradley
Kuhn</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><abstract>Despite what tablet- and
phone-loving pundits say, the laptop is here to stay. When a user wants to watch a movie on a train, they
reach for the
tablet first. But if they want to do actual, real work, they still prefer the laptop.
Meanwhile, software freedom should always be for everyone, not just technical users and software developers.
The GNOME project was one of the first in this history of Free Software to realize this, and seek to create a
free software desktop that truly allowed everyone to enjoy the software freedom that those of us had already
happily found with Bash and Emacs (or vi :) years before.
-This keynote will discuss why GNOME remains best poised to deliver software freedom to everyone, how GNOME
continues to be the best welcome-mat for those who want software freedom, and why GNOME remains absolutely
essential to the advancement of software freedom for decades to come.</abstract><title>Confessions of a
command line geek: Why I don't use GNOME but everyone else
should</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>109-confessions_of_a_command_line_geek_why_i_dont_use_gnome_but_everyone_else_should</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>Bradley
Kuhn</person></persons><date>2016-08-12T14:00:00+02:00</date><start>14:00</start><logo
/><duration>01:00</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event
id="111"><subtitle /><abstract /><title>Opening</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><track /><slug>111-opening</slug><type>talk</t
ype><persons><person>GUADEC
Team</person></persons><date>2016-08-12T10:00:00+02:00</date><start>10:00</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room><room name="Room 2"><event id="4"><subtitle /><abstract>Since last
year GNOME has sported a revamped newcomer experience for developers with the move from GNOME Love to
Newcomers (https://wiki.gnome.org/Newcomers/). The talk is a joint talk by Bastian Ilso and Carlos Soriano
explaining what's new and what lies in the future for GNOME's newcomers guide.</abstract><title>The GNOME
Newcomers initative</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Bastian
Ilso</person></persons><slug>4-the_gnome_newcomers_initative</slug><start>15:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T15:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>
Room 2</room></event><event id="5"><subtitle /><abstract>Open source projects are always understaffed. In
this talk methods to increase the public visibility of your project as well as gain, keep and grow newcomers
to maintainers will be presented.
+This keynote will discuss why GNOME remains best poised to deliver software freedom to everyone, how GNOME
continues to be the best welcome-mat for those who want software freedom, and why GNOME remains absolutely
essential to the advancement of software freedom for decades to
come.</abstract><start>14:00</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>109-confessions_of_a_command_line_geek_why_i_dont_use_gnome_but_everyone_else_should</slug></event><event
guid="cc7afd5b-dda6-5302-a41d-918795221100"
id="111"><title>Opening</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T10:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments
/><persons><person>GUADEC Team</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><abstract
/><start>10:00</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>111-opening</slug></event></room><room name="Room 2"><event
guid="e9fa88cb-0265-5ccd-a402-e56ce70fb12c" i
d="4"><title>The GNOME Newcomers
initative</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T15:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Bastian Ilso</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>15:00</start><abstract>Since last year, GNOME has sported a revamped newcomer
experience for developers with the move from GNOME Love to Newcomers (https://wiki.gnome.org/Newcomers/). The
talk is a joint talk by Bastian Ilso and Carlos Soriano explaining what's new and what lies in the future for
GNOME's newcomers guide.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>4-the_gnome_newcomers_initative</slug></event><event guid="d4776b28-450d-5c72-bbcd-16b813808106"
id="5"><title>Growing an Open Source
community</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T17:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><perso
n>Lasse Schuirmann</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 2</room><description
/><start>17:00</start><abstract>Open source projects are always understaffed. In this talk methods to
increase the public visibility of your project as well as gain, keeping and grow newcomers to maintainers
will be presented.
-All methods are shown on the practical example and how they have - or not have - proven to be useful for the
coala community. They focus on lowering the entry barrier as much as possible as well as rewarding successes
and building a continuous learning process with the community.</abstract><title>Growing an Open Source
community</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Lasse
Schuirmann</person></persons><slug>5-growing_an_open_source_community</slug><start>17:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T17:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="6"><subtitle /><abstract>GNOME provides a complete free software desktop. If you run it yourself you have
all the benefits of free software, the freedoms to use, study, share, and improve the software. You are in
control of what you do with your computer.
+All methods are shown on the practical example and how they have - or not have - proven to be useful for the
coala community. They focus on lowering the entry barrier as much as possible as well as rewarding successes
and building a continuous learning process with the community.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>5-growing_an_open_source_community</slug></event><event guid="23c23699-fdc5-5e08-aa98-ddc1aac45dae"
id="6"><title>What makes a web service free as in
freedom?</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T15:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Cornelius Schumacher</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>15:30</start><abstract>GNOME provides a complete free software desktop. If you
run it yourself you have all the benefits of free software, the freedoms to use, study, share, and improve
the softw
are. You are in control of what you do with your computer.
The situation is different when using software which is run by others as a service, even if these others run
free software. There you don't have control about what software is run and how. What does that mean for your
freedoms? How much control do you still have? Do you know what is happening to your data? Do you have the
freedom to switch to a different service? How is your own freedom affecting the freedom of other users of the
same service? There are a lot of questions like these.
@@ -30,42 +28,42 @@ This presentation will give an overview of where we are, what approaches to defi
[1]: https://userdatamanifesto.org/
[2]: https://tosdr.org/
-[3]: https://www.gnu.org/software/repo-criteria.en.html</abstract><title>What makes a web service free as in
freedom?</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Cornelius
Schumacher</person></persons><slug>6-what_makes_a_web_service_free_as_in_freedom</slug><start>15:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T15:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="25"><subtitle /><abstract>There are around 285 million visually impaired people in the world, out of
which around 38-39 million are completely blind. One interesting fact is that over 15 million of blind people
are from India, and similarly a large number is from different developing or undeveloped countries, and poor
socioeconomic status. There is a lot of software available for accessibility, and most of it is extremely
unaccessible, both economical
ly and socially. This is where Free Software comes in. Free Software desktops, especially GNOME, have made
large strides in accessibility in the last few years, and are proving to be an effective way of reaching
these people, introducing them to a whole new world of computers.
+[3]: https://www.gnu.org/software/repo-criteria.en.html</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>6-what_makes_a_web_service_free_as_in_freedom</slug></event><event
guid="14127f56-48e5-590d-a9f7-bd236b7fbf79" id="17"><title>How your package is being
translated…</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-12T11:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Alex Eng</person><person>Pravin
Satpute</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 2</room><description
/><start>11:00</start><abstract>The process of translate strings into different languages is known as
"localization".
+This is because it is part of the software development lifecycle, and it is the process of adapting the
software into a specific country/region/market. The talk will go through the localization workflow in Gnome,
Fedora and Openstack, and also introduce latest technology called 'Zanata' which can support successful
localization environment for Fedora and Openstack.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>17-how_your_package_is_being_translated</slug></event><event
guid="9e890636-bb35-5138-a7c0-dcd6b845ab57" id="25"><title>Accessibility and the Free
Desktop</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T16:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Gaurav Pareek</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>16:30</start><abstract>There are around 285 million visually impaired people in
the world, out of which around 38-39 mi
llion are completely blind. One interesting fact is that over 15 million of blind people are from India, and
similarly a large number is from different developing or undeveloped countries, and poor socioeconomic
status. There is a lot of software available for accessibility, and most of it is extremely unaccessible,
both economically and socially. This is where Free Software comes in. Free Software desktops, especially
GNOME, have made large strides in accessibility in the last few years, and are proving to be an effective way
of reaching these people, introducing them to a whole new world of computers.
-I'm going to talk about how Free Software enables people to expand upon accessibility software, add regional
languages, and helps people in bad socioeconomic settings. I'll then proceed to show a 2-3 minute demo of how
the universal access features of GNOME work, and what we need to improve.</abstract><title>Accessibility and
the Free Desktop</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Gaurav
Pareek</person></persons><slug>25-accessibility_and_the_free_desktop</slug><start>16:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T16:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="37"><subtitle /><abstract>Endless OS is an operating system based on GNOME, and is one of the first real
world deployments to make use of innovative distribution technologies such as OSTree, xdg-app and
gnome-software.
+I'm going to talk about how Free Software enables people to expand upon accessibility software, add regional
languages, and helps people in bad socioeconomic settings. I'll then proceed to show a 2-3 minute demo of how
the universal access features of GNOME work, and what we need to improve.</abstract><links
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>25-accessibility_and_the_free_desktop</slug></event><event
guid="2e82c499-4187-556c-a5f8-dc1467917e78" id="37"><title>Anatomy of Endless
OS</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-12T11:45:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Cosimo Cecchi</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>11:45</start><abstract>Endless OS is an operating system based on GNOME, and is
one of the first real world deployments to make use of innovative distribution technologies such as OSTree,
xdg-app and gnome-sof
tware.
During this presentation, I will walk through the architecture of the operating system and the
infrastructure that we use at Endless to maintain it and deploy it, including the challenges we faced and
what lies ahead for us.
-[Note: Endless OS is not at the moment available for download, but it will be when GUADEC comes
around]</abstract><title>Anatomy of Endless OS</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Cosimo
Cecchi</person></persons><slug>37-anatomy_of_endless_os</slug><start>11:45</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-12T11:45:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="104"><subtitle /><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><title>Unconference
#2</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>104-unconference-2</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><date>2016-08-12T17:30:00+02:00</date><start>17:30</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 2</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room><room name="E
lsewhere"><event id="114"><subtitle /><abstract>We are going to go to a park and picnic there. Some games,
light food, and drinks will be
provided.</abstract><title>Picnic</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>114-picnic</slug><persons><person>GUADEC
Team</person></persons><date>2016-08-12T19:30:00+02:00</date><start>19:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>03:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="201"><subtitle /><abstract /><title>Venue
opens</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>201-venue_opens</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-12T09:30:00+02:00</date><start>09:30</start><type
/><logo /><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="202"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Break</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license>
</recording><track /><slug>202-break</slug><persons
/><date>2016-08-12T10:30:00+02:00</date><start>10:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="203"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Lunch</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>203-lunch</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-12T12:30:00+02:00</date><start>12:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>01:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="204"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Break</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>204-break</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-12T16:00:00+02:00</date><start>16:00</start><type /><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room></day><day date="2016-08-13" end="2016-08-13T23:
59:00+02:00" index="3" start="2016-08-13T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1"><event id="16"><subtitle
/><abstract>GTK is an old tool kit; it turns 20 in 2007. While its history is a long, unbroken chain of
progress, GTK is, at its heart, heavily based on how we used to do things in GUI tool kits two decades ago.
Over the past 5 years, since the 3.0 release, the GTK team has been hard at work into bringing the tool kit
internals kicking and screaming into the XXI century. This has inevitably caused some friction with
application developers, but it has also opened an entire world of possibilities.
+[Note: Endless OS is not at the moment available for download, but it will be when GUADEC comes
around]</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>37-anatomy_of_endless_os</slug></event><event guid="436e87eb-2b8e-52c2-95d1-48763a7b07f1"
id="104"><title>Unconference #2</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T17:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments
/><persons><person>to be announced</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><start>17:30</start><language>eng</language><links
/><subtitle /><slug>104-unconference-2</slug></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event
guid="be6d24b5-d3b6-5b8b-afa1-40edae3161c7" id="114"><title>Picnic</title><track
/><duration>03:30</duration><type
/><date>2016-08-12T19:30:00+02:00</date><start>19:30</start><language>eng</language><log
o /><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><abstract>We are going to go to a
park and picnic there. Some games, light food, and drinks will be provided.</abstract><attachments /><links
/><room>Elsewhere</room><subtitle /><persons><person>GUADEC
Team</person></persons><slug>114-picnic</slug></event><event guid="fd199473-c615-5f85-9975-575ebe87a07a"
id="201"><title>Venue opens</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T09:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>09:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>201-venue_opens</slug></event><event guid="d6b06dee-7e6c-5f25-87fb-3bc31998f997"
id="202"><title>Break</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T10:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><t
ype /><track /><start>10:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links
/><subtitle /><slug>202-break</slug></event><event guid="b8d33ab3-733c-5dd3-9921-24af014cac4f"
id="203"><title>Lunch</title><duration>01:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T12:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>12:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>203-lunch</slug></event><event guid="abe4e817-53ef-5220-9c78-b15253d0ebc1"
id="204"><title>Break</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-12T16:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>16:00</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>204-break</slug></event></room></day><day date="2016-08-13" end="2016-08-13T23:
59:00+02:00" index="3" start="2016-08-13T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1"><event
guid="adbb36c1-257e-5bc9-81a8-9cd5077e031b" id="16"><title>GTK: are we in the future,
yet?</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T11:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Emmanuele Bassi</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>11:00</start><abstract>GTK is an old tool kit; it turns 20 in 2007. While its
history is a long, unbroken chain of progress, GTK is, at its heart, heavily based on how we used to do
things in GUI tool kits two decades ago. Over the past 5 years, since the 3.0 release, the GTK team has been
hard at work into bringing the tool kit internals kicking and screaming into the XXI century. This has
inevitably caused some friction with application developers, but it has also opened an entire world of
possibilities.
-In this talk I'll outline where we are coming from, what has changed, where we're going in the future — and
how we'll get there.</abstract><title>GTK: are we in the future,
yet?</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Emmanuele
Bassi</person></persons><slug>16-gtk_are_we_in_the_future_yet</slug><start>11:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T11:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="44"><subtitle /><abstract>... with the Meson build system on Linux, and ~15x faster on Windows.
+In this talk I'll outline where we are coming from, what has changed, where we're going in the future — and
how we'll get there.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>16-gtk_are_we_in_the_future_yet</slug></event><event guid="6d2e7e92-c56f-5358-be16-4c22e07f2daf"
id="44"><title>Making your GNOME app compile 2.4x
faster</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T10:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Nirbheek Chauhan</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>10:00</start><abstract>... with the Meson build system on Linux, and ~15x
faster on Windows.
Last year, Jussi Pakkanen (the maintainer of Meson) gave a talk about improving the way GNOME apps are built
by replacing Autotools with the Meson build system.
This year, I'll be talking about how we at Centricular worked along exactly those lines and ported
GStreamer, GLib, and its core dependencies from Autotools to Meson. Besides the improvements in speed, using
Meson provided numerous advantages over Autotools such as cleaner syntax, better cross-platform support,
maintainable code, and much more.
-I will be talking about our porting journey and make the case that Meson is indeed ready for replacing
Autotools in every case we've seen so far. The next step is convincing more projects to try out
Meson.</abstract><title>Making your GNOME app compile 2.4x
faster</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Nirbheek
Chauhan</person></persons><slug>44-making_your_gnome_app_compile_24x_faster</slug><start>10:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T10:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="48"><subtitle /><abstract>While most of the developed world has decent internet access, this is not
universally distributed. In much of the developing world, people have very incomplete and spotty access to
the internet.
+I will be talking about our porting journey and make the case that Meson is indeed ready for replacing
Autotools in every case we've seen so far. The next step is convincing more projects to try out
Meson.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>44-making_your_gnome_app_compile_24x_faster</slug></event><event
guid="bb353abf-cc6c-515a-ae06-d5bfffcae654" id="48"><title>An asynchronous internet for
GNOME</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-13T11:45:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Jonathan Blandford</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>11:45</start><abstract>While most of the developed world has decent internet
access, this is not universally distributed. In much of the developing world, people have very incomplete and
spotty access to the internet.
-At Endless, we are shipping GNOME into that environment. We've had a number of challenges in modifying the
desktop to work within these constraints. The end result is a version of GNOME that is useful and relevant
both with and without a network enabled.</abstract><title>An asynchronous internet for
GNOME</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Jonathan
Blandford</person></persons><slug>48-an_asynchronous_internet_for_gnome</slug><start>11:45</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T11:45:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="51"><subtitle /><abstract>While there have been great strides in building the GTK+ stack on Windows,
cross-building for Windows from Linux is still the easiest way for most developers to build their
applications. I will demonstrate, using the Fedora MinGW project, how to buil
d a GTK+ application, including a simple installer to bundle all the dependencies into a single
distributable file.</abstract><title>Building GTK+ applications for Windows with
MinGW</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>David
King</person></persons><slug>51-building_gtk_applications_for_windows_with_mingw</slug><start>14:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T14:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="100"><subtitle /><abstract>The Annual General Meeting of the GNOME Foundation and team
reports.</abstract><title>GNOME Foundation Annual General
Meeting</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>100-gnome_foundation_annual_general_meeting</slug><persons><person>GNOME
Board</person></persons><date>2016-08-13T15:00:00+02:00</date><start>1
5:00</start><type>meeting</type><logo /><duration>04:00</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="105"><subtitle /><abstract>Yet to be
announced</abstract><title>Unconference #3</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><track /><slug>105-unconference-3</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><date>2016-08-13T14:30:00+02:00</date><start>14:30</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room><room name="Room 2"><event id="12"><subtitle /><abstract>An
extension of gnome-continuous.
+At Endless, we are shipping GNOME into that environment. We've had a number of challenges in modifying the
desktop to work within these constraints. The end result is a version of GNOME that is useful and relevant
both with and without a network enabled.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>48-an_asynchronous_internet_for_gnome</slug></event><event
guid="d71881e6-2436-54ab-bd5b-713e42b33b8e" id="51"><title>Building GTK+ applications for Windows with
MinGW</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T14:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>David King</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>14:00</start><abstract>While there have been great strides in building the GTK+
stack on Windows, cross-building for Windows from Linux is still the easiest way for most developers to build
their applications. I will demon
strate, using the Fedora MinGW project, how to build a GTK+ application, including a simple installer to
bundle all the dependencies into a single distributable file.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>51-building_gtk_applications_for_windows_with_mingw</slug></event><event
guid="cae033cb-4acd-5194-895c-1cd1dfb66e7c" id="100"><title>GNOME Foundation Annual General
Meeting</title><duration>04:00</duration><date>2016-08-13T15:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments /><persons><person>GNOME
Board</person></persons><type>meeting</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><abstract>The Annual General Meeting
of the GNOME Foundation and team reports.</abstract><start>15:00</start><language>eng</language><links
/><subtitle /><slug>100-gnome_foundation_annual_general_meeting</slug></event><event
guid="01e8a7f0-684c-55b0-8b1c-930962a49729" id
="105"><title>Unconference #3</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T14:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments
/><persons><person>to be announced</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><start>14:30</start><language>eng</language><links
/><subtitle /><slug>105-unconference-3</slug></event></room><room name="Room 2"><event
guid="bc4252d3-3aaa-502b-997a-7a329bdc7cfe" id="12"><title>GNOME Games graph based health
analytics</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T14:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Sahil Sareen</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>14:00</start><abstract>An extension of gnome-continuous.
-A graph based application to be able to check the health of the GNOME games built using python and neo4j.
+A graph based application to be able to check the health of the GNOME Games built using Python and neo4j.
-*- Check which gnome modules builds are failing/passing/timing out/missing from gnome-continuous builds
-*- Find their dependencies
--*- Run queries on a graph to find out what possibly broke a module. For example: Find out which
dependencies are used exclusively by the failing modules as an indication that the dependency is broken.
+-*- Run queries on a graph to find out what possibly broke a module; for example, find out which
dependencies are used exclusively by the failing modules as an indication that the dependency is broken
** Source code: https://github.com/sahilsareen/GNOMEGamesHealthAnalytics
-** Demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUzUfVo77PI</abstract><title>GNOME Games graph based health
analytics</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Sahil
Sareen</person></persons><slug>12-gnome_games_graph_based_health_analytics</slug><start>14:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T14:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="14"><subtitle /><abstract>I will talk about GNOME Application implementation on Fans Shoes Factory.How
the impact of using Free Software can reduce cost/save the budget and improve employee skill.
-And Shoes Factory became sponsor for some GNOME Asia Summit (2015 and 2016).</abstract><title>Story of a
shoe factory</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Ahmad
Haris</person></persons><slug>14-story_of_a_shoe_factory</slug><start>11:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T11:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="15"><subtitle /><abstract>Many people know GNOME Should use for IT Related. For example for IT student,
RnD, Startup.
+** Demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUzUfVo77PI</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>12-gnome_games_graph_based_health_analytics</slug></event><event
guid="3e32c3e2-6bdb-5afa-be55-9b15f35398c8" id="14"><title>Story of a shoe
factory</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T11:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Ahmad Haris</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>11:00</start><abstract>I will talk about GNOME application implementation on
Fans Shoes Factory. How the impact of using Free Software can reduce cost/save the budget and improve
employee skill, and support FLOSS by becoming a sponsor for GNOME Asia Summit (2015 and
2016).</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>14-story_of_a_shoe_factory</slug></event><event guid="6c
f0e9df-438b-5b7d-907b-50f4b6f98237" id="15"><title>GNOME for non-technical
use</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T10:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Estu Fardani</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>10:00</start><abstract>Many people who know of GNOME are involved in IT related
areas. For example, they may be IT students, work in R&D, or be involved in a startup.
-But how about some community from mother, village officer who just using computer for their daily activity.
They just using computer without know about OS in their computer, without know about GNOME, about GNU/Linux,
FOSS related.
+But what about other communities from mother to village officer who just using computer for their daily
activity. They just using computer without knowing about OS in their computer, without knowing about GNOME,
about GNU/Linux, or FOSS.
-This session will talk about this, how our community spread about GNOME to new
people.</abstract><title>GNOME for non-technical use</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Estu
Fardani</person></persons><slug>15-gnome_for_nontechnical_use</slug><start>10:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T10:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="53"><subtitle /><abstract>With the success of connected cars, there is an increasing demand for a secure,
consumer-oriented infotainment platform. The open source application framework "Apertis" serves as embedded
end-to-end solution in the automotive environment. With many contributions to the GNOME technologies over the
years and its own Free software components, Apertis is truly a unique product in the automotive world which
pushes the boundaries of a tradit
ionally closed source environment.
+This session will talk about this, how our community spread about GNOME to new people.</abstract><links
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>15-gnome_for_nontechnical_use</slug></event><event guid="7a70d296-6ab0-5644-ad13-06c38538024d"
id="53"><title>Building an automotive platform from
GNOME</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-13T11:45:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Lukas Nack</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>11:45</start><abstract>With the success of connected cars, there is an
increasing demand for a secure, consumer-oriented infotainment platform. The open source application
framework "Apertis" serves as embedded end-to-end solution in the automotive environment. With many
contributions to the GNOME technologies over the years and its own Free software components, Apertis is truly
a unique product in the
automotive world which pushes the boundaries of a traditionally closed source environment.
-Security is guaranteed by multiple lines of defense, including MAC (Mandatory Access Control) and xdg-app as
sandboxing mechanism. D-Bus provides a stable SDK-API to the app-developer.</abstract><title>Building an
automotive platform from GNOME</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Lukas
Nack</person></persons><slug>53-building_an_automotive_platform_from_gnome</slug><start>11:45</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-13T11:45:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="106"><subtitle /><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><title>Unconference
#4</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>106-unconference-4</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><date>2016-08-13T14:30:00+02:00</date><start>14:30</start><logo /><
duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 2</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event id="115"><subtitle /><abstract>Bar
evening at Z10. There will be no food
available.</abstract><title>Z10</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>115-z10</slug><persons><person>Z10 and GUADEC
Teams</person></persons><date>2016-08-13T21:00:00+02:00</date><start>21:00</start><type /><logo
/><duration>02:59</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="205"><subtitle /><abstract /><title>Venue
opens</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>205-venue_opens</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-13T09:30:00+02:00</date><start>09:30</start><type
/><logo /><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="206"><subtitle /><abstract /><ti
tle>Break</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>206-break</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-13T10:30:00+02:00</date><start>10:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="207"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Break</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>207-break</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-13T11:30:00+02:00</date><start>11:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>00:15</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="208"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Lunch</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>208-lunch</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-13T12:30:00+02:00</date><start>12:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>01:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links /><language>e
ng</language></event></room></day><day date="2016-08-14" end="2016-08-14T23:59:00+02:00" index="4"
start="2016-08-14T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1"><event id="11"><subtitle /><abstract>This talk will
cover basic information and possibilities of Qt Platform Abstraction and present actual result of our attempt
to integrate Qt applications into Gnome, namely QGnomePlatform and Adwaita-qt
projects.</abstract><title>Integration of Qt applications</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Jan
Grulich</person></persons><slug>11-integration_of_qt_applications</slug><start>15:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T15:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="32"><subtitle /><abstract>An important aspect of humane interfaces is meeting the needs of a variety of
people. They all have different skills,
restrictions and whims. How do you figure out what exactly those are?
+Security is guaranteed by multiple lines of defense, including MAC (Mandatory Access Control) and xdg-app as
sandboxing mechanism. D-Bus provides a stable SDK-API to the app-developer.</abstract><links
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>53-building_an_automotive_platform_from_gnome</slug></event><event
guid="bbfbd734-10aa-5f7a-8bb3-4255d7949690" id="106"><title>Unconference
#4</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T14:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments /><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 2</room><abstract>Yet to be
announced</abstract><start>14:30</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>106-unconference-4</slug></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event
guid="5716e6a6-b550-53a9-b1e6-00b10609b750" id="115"><title>Z10</title><track /><duration>02:59</dura
tion><type /><date>2016-08-13T21:00:00+02:00</date><start>21:00</start><language>eng</language><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><abstract>Bar evening at Z10. There
will be no food available.</abstract><attachments /><links /><room>Elsewhere</room><subtitle
/><persons><person>Z10 and GUADEC Teams</person></persons><slug>115-z10</slug></event><event
guid="a74eebdc-899a-579d-a84f-ba8d18667403" id="205"><title>Venue
opens</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T09:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>09:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>205-venue_opens</slug></event><event guid="4049ad77-c1eb-5e0a-b4c2-ca3c0de54f10"
id="206"><title>Break</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T10:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><op
tout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type /><track /><start>10:30</start><abstract
/><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle /><slug>206-break</slug></event><event
guid="cdffc551-86dc-5f92-8d61-efe3fc4276fa"
id="207"><title>Break</title><duration>00:15</duration><date>2016-08-13T11:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>11:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>207-break</slug></event><event guid="53f0a9ac-99b8-5eb9-9fa3-3e914a2a89c7"
id="208"><title>Lunch</title><duration>01:30</duration><date>2016-08-13T12:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>12:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>208-lunch</slug></eve
nt></room></day><day date="2016-08-14" end="2016-08-14T23:59:00+02:00" index="4"
start="2016-08-14T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Room 1"><event guid="dc201b85-f588-533c-b7c2-4498bc53e9dc"
id="11"><title>Integration of Qt
applications</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T15:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Jan Grulich</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>15:30</start><abstract>This talk will cover basic information and possibilities
of Qt Platform Abstraction and present actual result of our attempt to integrate Qt applications into GNOME,
namely QGnomePlatform and Adwaita-qt projects.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>11-integration_of_qt_applications</slug></event><event guid="673a0736-8798-56d3-9083-7fc72a304f31"
id="32"><title>One does not simply take a bus</title><duration>00:30</duratio
n><date>2016-08-14T16:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo /><attachments
/><persons><person>Andreas Nilsson</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>16:30</start><abstract>An important aspect of humane interfaces is meeting the
needs of a variety of people. They all have different skills, restrictions and whims. How do you figure out
what exactly those are?
-In this presentation I'll talk about how I used user interviews and personas for that purpose, using them as
tools for discussions and implementation of Public Transportation in GNOME Maps.</abstract><title>One does
not simply take a bus</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Andreas
Nilsson</person></persons><slug>32-one_does_not_simply_take_a_bus</slug><start>16:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T16:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="39"><subtitle /><abstract>Endless devices include a lot of content downloaded from the internet so people
without internet connections can have access to it. We create lots of apps to organize and present the
content.
+In this presentation I'll talk about how I used user interviews and personas for that purpose, using them as
tools for discussions and implementation of Public Transportation in GNOME Maps.</abstract><links
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>32-one_does_not_simply_take_a_bus</slug></event><event guid="7950b6e4-5500-543f-b296-3f116a9457e6"
id="39"><title>Modular UIs for offline
content</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T15:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Philip Chimento</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>15:00</start><abstract>Endless devices include a lot of content downloaded from
the internet so people without internet connections can have access to it. We create lots of apps to organize
and present the content.
-We are creating a "modular" system for putting together apps quickly, and it's built on GTK. (Think one
level higher than GTK widgets.) I'll talk about what such a system should and shouldn't do, and about pushing
some of GTK's limits.</abstract><title>Modular UIs for offline
content</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Philip
Chimento</person></persons><slug>39-modular_uis_for_offline_content</slug><start>15:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T15:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="42"><subtitle /><abstract>"ZeMarmot" is a project of 2D animation movie, to be released under CC
By-SA/Free Art licenses and fully made with creative Free Software. In particular, it is currently fully
digitally drawn on GIMP, video-edited in Blender and sound-edited with Ardour.
+We are creating a "modular" system for putting together apps quickly, and it's built on GTK. (Think one
level higher than GTK widgets.) I'll talk about what such a system should and shouldn't do, and about pushing
some of GTK's limits.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>39-modular_uis_for_offline_content</slug></event><event guid="f2441a62-9871-573d-9852-acd7191b974f"
id="42"><title>ZeMarmot — Open Animation film produced with
FOSS</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-14T11:45:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Jehan Pagès</person><person>Aryeom
Han</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><description
/><start>11:45</start><abstract>"ZeMarmot" is a project of 2D animation movie, to be released under CC
By-SA/Free Art licenses and fully made with creative Free Software. In particular, it is currently fully
digitally draw
n on GIMP, video-edited in Blender and sound-edited with Ardour.
Our desktop of choice is GNOME, under a GNU/Linux operating system.
We will present the film project and its status, what happened in the last year since we started the
project, but also how we contribute back, since Jehan, scenarist of ZeMarmot, has also been an active
contributor of GIMP and other Free Software for several years.
@@ -77,20 +75,20 @@ Finally we would like to raise the question: is GNOME ready for the creative art
ZeMarmot's director, Aryeom Han, is a young South Korean director of animation film, whose first co-directed
short animation got screened in several festivals and won 2 prices, and later worked on corporate videos and
several projects. Together with Jehan, they also won a "Firefox Flicks" price in 2012, in "New Technology"
category, for an animation augmented through HTML5.
About ZeMarmot: http://film.zemarmot.net/
-Blog: http://girinstud.io/</abstract><title>ZeMarmot — Open Animation film produced with
FOSS</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Jehan Pagès</person><person>Aryeom
Han</person></persons><slug>42-zemarmot__open_animation_film_produced_with_foss</slug><start>11:45</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T11:45:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 1</room></event><event
id="43"><subtitle /><abstract>This talk will cover the basics of getting started writing a new application
with Builder. Christian will live demonstrate creating a project from scratch and share his techniques when
writing software for GNOME.</abstract><title>Coding live! with
Builder</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Christian
Hergert</person></persons><slug>43-coding_live_with_builder<
/slug><start>11:00</start><attachments /><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description
/><track /><date>2016-08-14T11:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room
1</room></event><event id="47"><subtitle /><abstract>Have you ever wondered what the GNOME Foundation
actually does? What do the employees do to keep the Foundation running? I will cover the details on what is
required to keep the Foundation active and solvent. Come see the challenges we face and maybe even see what
you can do to help!</abstract><title>A look behind the curtain—how the Foundation
runs</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Rosanna
Yuen</person></persons><slug>47-a_look_behind_the_curtainhow_the_foundation_runs</slug><start>10:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T10:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>R
oom 1</room></event><event id="102"><subtitle /><abstract>Lightning talks</abstract><title>Lightning
talks</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>102-lightning_talks</slug><persons
/><date>2016-08-14T17:30:00+02:00</date><start>17:30</start><type>talk</type><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event
id="107"><subtitle /><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><title>Unconference
#5</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>107-unconference-5</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><date>2016-08-14T17:00:00+02:00</date><start>17:00</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event
id="110"><subtitle /><abstract>The roots of the Internet can be found in the move from large mainframes to
smaller and locally connected machines (Unices or VAXen) Unix. Obviously there was a need to connect to
remote machines in a convenient way and not only with manually managed uucp networks.
+Blog: http://girinstud.io/</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>42-zemarmot__open_animation_film_produced_with_foss</slug></event><event
guid="1b0f7a57-4f8e-5897-855a-a1e0fe4a8de5" id="43"><title>Coding live! with
Builder</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-14T11:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Christian Hergert</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>11:00</start><abstract>This talk will cover the basics of getting started
writing a new application with Builder. Christian will live demonstrate creating a project from scratch and
share his techniques when writing software for GNOME.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>43-coding_live_with_builder</slug></event><event guid="4e4c4d4b-2221-57f8-8f5f-44ad40c22e12"
id="47"><ti
tle>A look behind the curtain—how the Foundation
runs</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T10:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Rosanna Yuen</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><description /><start>10:00</start><abstract>Have you ever wondered what the GNOME Foundation
actually does? What do the employees do to keep the Foundation running? I will cover the details on what is
required to keep the Foundation active and solvent. Come see the challenges we face and maybe even see what
you can do to help!</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>47-a_look_behind_the_curtainhow_the_foundation_runs</slug></event><event
guid="3a9a1c99-8dd6-5b0e-bcf7-1c0c5df63c00" id="102"><title>Lightning talks</title><track
/><duration>00:30</duration><type>talk</type><date>2016-08-14T17:30:00+02:00</date><start>17:30</start><language>en
g</language><logo /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><abstract>Lightning talks</abstract><attachments /><links
/><room>Room 1</room><subtitle /><persons /><slug>102-lightning_talks</slug></event><event
guid="46647784-a003-5e87-9fcf-881d1c42efb6" id="107"><title>Unconference
#5</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T17:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments /><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><abstract>Yet to be
announced</abstract><start>17:00</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>107-unconference-5</slug></event><event guid="9482c5aa-b3ef-5cc5-bfdc-ffef6d4b7045"
id="110"><title>We want more centralization, do
we?</title><duration>01:00</duration><date>2016-08-14T14:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording>
<attachments /><persons><person>Werner Koch</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
1</room><abstract>The roots of the Internet can be found in the move from large mainframes to smaller and
locally connected machines (Unices or VAXen) Unix. Obviously there was a need to connect to remote machines
in a convenient way and not only with manually managed uucp networks.
Eventually in the mid 90ies decentralization was achieved and directly visible due to Gopher and the Web.
With the move of the big search engines to a general service providers, things started to revert to the
former centralization.
The Internet still looks like a collection of many computers but in reality most system do not anymore work
without access to, say, apis.google.com. Unfortunately desktops environments moved in the same direction.
-Do we really want to rely on other peoples machines?</abstract><title>We want more centralization, do
we?</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>110-we_want_more_centralization_do_we</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>Werner
Koch</person></persons><date>2016-08-14T14:00:00+02:00</date><start>14:00</start><logo
/><duration>01:00</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event
id="112"><subtitle /><abstract /><title>Closing</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><track /><slug>112-closing</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>GUADEC
Team</person></persons><date>2016-08-14T18:00:00+02:00</date><start>18:00</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 1</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room><room name="Room 2"><event id="20"><subtitle /><abstract>China is
becoming a huge country applying op
en source software. Government didn't only claim not to apply Win 8, but also were encouraged to use Linux
like Munich. All require a customized GNOME Desktop. We need to discuss how to meet a market of annual
millions of desktop.</abstract><title>GNOME: customized desktop for the
government</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Zhenning
Li</person></persons><slug>20-gnome_customized_desktop_for_the_government</slug><start>16:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T16:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="21"><subtitle /><abstract>This is a summary of the infrastructure that GNOME provides to store secrets
like passwords, SSH and GPG keys, and X.509 certificates.
+Do we really want to rely on other peoples
machines?</abstract><start>14:00</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>110-we_want_more_centralization_do_we</slug></event><event
guid="87708b2d-cf10-5ff2-81d9-2545bb2fb198"
id="112"><title>Closing</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T18:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments
/><persons><person>GUADEC Team</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room 1</room><abstract
/><start>18:00</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>112-closing</slug></event></room><room name="Room 2"><event
guid="b5162e55-01c1-5dd8-8f17-b78ff5e85d25" id="20"><title>GNOME: customized desktop for the
government</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T16:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Zhenning Li</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><descript
ion /><start>16:30</start><abstract>China is becoming a huge user of open source software. The Chinese
government doesn't only claim not to not use Windows 8, but also encourage the use of Linux, like the city
of Munich. All require a customized GNOME Desktop. We need to discuss how to meet a market of millions of
desktops.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>20-gnome_customized_desktop_for_the_government</slug></event><event
guid="18b5c345-1c6a-5833-839b-15cae3a6d269" id="21"><title>How do/could we store secrets in
GNOME?</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-14T11:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Federico Mena Quintero</person></persons><type>talk</type><track
/><room>Room 2</room><description /><start>11:00</start><abstract>This is a summary of the infrastructure
that GNOME provides to store secrets like passwords, SSH and GPG keys, and X
.509 certificates.
Our infrastructure is more or less adequate within GNOME, but it interfaces poorly with other pieces of
infrastructure that people use, like Firefox, 2-Factor Authentication hardware, and password managers for
mobile devices.
-We will describe some use cases and some ways in which GNOME could be improved to accomodate cross-platform,
cross-device, cross-team password storage.</abstract><title>How do/could we store secrets in
GNOME?</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Federico Mena
Quintero</person></persons><slug>21-how_docould_we_store_secrets_in_gnome</slug><start>11:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T11:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="33"><subtitle /><abstract>This talk intents to introduce GNOME Music to the audience, briefly go through
it's development history, analyze it's current state, and announce the plans for the
future.</abstract><title>GNOME Music: state of the union</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Felipe Borges</perso
n></persons><slug>33-gnome_music_state_of_the_union</slug><start>15:30</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T15:30:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="46"><subtitle /><abstract>The traditional model of a GNOME desktop is tightly tied to the traditional
model of a Linux distribution: many packages that are individually installed onto the users system; some are
low-level system services, some are core desktop components, and some are applications. While in some ways
very
+We will describe some use cases and some ways in which GNOME could be improved to accomodate cross-platform,
cross-device, cross-team password storage.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>21-how_docould_we_store_secrets_in_gnome</slug></event><event
guid="b0c67d24-645a-5caa-bf6a-bc4f7ab88075" id="33"><title>GNOME Music: state of the
union</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T15:30:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Felipe Borges</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>15:30</start><abstract>This talk intents to introduce GNOME Music to the
audience, briefly go through it's development history, analyze it's current state, and announce the plans for
the future.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle /><slug>33-gnome_music_state_of_the_u
nion</slug></event><event guid="70c50efd-f7d7-57a4-8dc6-dcd7635055de" id="46"><title>Reworking the desktop
distribution</title><duration>00:45</duration><date>2016-08-14T11:45:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Owen Taylor</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>11:45</start><abstract>The traditional model of a GNOME desktop is tightly tied
to the traditional model of a Linux distribution: many packages that are individually installed onto the
users system; some are low-level system services, some are core desktop components, and some are
applications. While in some ways very
flexible, this model is also fragile: the continuing correct operation of the system depends on a complex
dance of installation and upgrades of thousands
of packages. Systems based on free software components, from OLPC, to ChromeOS, to Android have moved away
from this model, but are no longer recognizable as a Linux distribution.
Upcoming releases of Fedora Workstation will offer an alternate installation method where the operating
system is distributed as an ostree image and atomically upgraded as a whole, while applications are installed
on top as xdg-app bundles. The intent is to provide an experience that is much more
robust than the traditional package-based installation, while providing additional flexibility in installing
applications. Applications will no
longer be strictly bound to the Fedora package set, making it easy for third parties to provide applications
that work across multiple distributions and distribution versions. The talk will go over the underlying
technologies and discuss how they interact with a traditional distribution ecosystem, and with
-the evolving ecosystem of xdg-app. There will also be discussion of how users, such as developers, need to
work differently on such a system, and how we can best enable that.</abstract><title>Reworking the desktop
distribution</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Owen
Taylor</person></persons><slug>46-reworking_the_desktop_distribution</slug><start>11:45</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:45</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T11:45:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="52"><subtitle /><abstract>A quick overview of what's been happening in the last few years. Hear about
where the different docs projects are heading, all the things that have been happening with the team and the
most epic of hackfests where the team worked on all the docs.</abstract><title>Documentation: state of the
union</title><recording><optout>false</optou
t><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license></recording><persons><person>Kat</person><person>none</person></persons><slug>52-documentation_state_of_the_union</slug><start>15:00</start><attachments
/><type>talk</type><links /><duration>00:30</duration><description /><track
/><date>2016-08-14T15:00:00+02:00</date><logo /><language>eng</language><room>Room 2</room></event><event
id="108"><subtitle /><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><title>Unconference
#6</title><recording><optout>false</optout><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license></recording><track
/><slug>108-unconference-6</slug><type>talk</type><persons><person>to be
announced</person></persons><date>2016-08-14T17:00:00+02:00</date><start>17:00</start><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Room 2</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event id="116"><subtitle /><abstract>We are
going to visit the beer garden at the Hoepfener Burg (local brewery) and have a sponsored dinner there.<
/abstract><title>Centricular Dinner at Hoepfener
Burg</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>116-centricular_dinner_at_hoepfener_burg</slug><type /><persons
/><date>2016-08-14T20:00:00+02:00</date><start>20:00</start><logo /><duration>03:59</duration><attachments
/><room>Elsewhere</room><links /><language>eng</language></event><event id="209"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Venue opens</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>209-venue_opens</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-14T09:30:00+02:00</date><start>09:30</start><type
/><logo /><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="210"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Break</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>210-break</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-14T10:30:00+02:00</date><start>10:30</start><type /><log
o /><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="211"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Lunch</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>211-lunch</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-14T12:30:00+02:00</date><start>12:30</start><type /><logo
/><duration>01:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event><event id="212"><subtitle /><abstract
/><title>Break</title><recording><optout>true</optout><license>no-video</license></recording><track
/><slug>212-break</slug><persons /><date>2016-08-14T16:00:00+02:00</date><start>16:00</start><type /><logo
/><duration>00:30</duration><attachments /><room>Elsewhere</room><links
/><language>eng</language></event></room></day></schedule>
\ No newline at end of file
+the evolving ecosystem of xdg-app. There will also be discussion of how users, such as developers, need to
work differently on such a system, and how we can best enable that.</abstract><links /><recording><license>CC
BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>46-reworking_the_desktop_distribution</slug></event><event
guid="cd873c69-aae6-5edd-b537-cad7fbed6d67" id="52"><title>Documentation: state of the
union</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T15:00:00+02:00</date><language>eng</language><logo
/><attachments /><persons><person>Kat</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><description /><start>15:00</start><abstract>A quick overview of what's been happening in the last
few years. Hear about where the different docs projects are heading, all the things that have been happening
with the team and the most epic of hackfests where the team worked on all the docs.</abstract><links
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</l
icense><optout>false</optout></recording><subtitle
/><slug>52-documentation_state_of_the_union</slug></event><event guid="93bb2614-9440-5ad3-b7f4-95aa88a9629a"
id="108"><title>Unconference #6</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T17:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><attachments
/><persons><person>to be announced</person></persons><type>talk</type><track /><room>Room
2</room><abstract>Yet to be announced</abstract><start>17:00</start><language>eng</language><links
/><subtitle /><slug>108-unconference-6</slug></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event
guid="73752994-99d6-5dd2-8b4f-e55e4fb7e683" id="116"><title>Centricular Dinner at Hoepfener
Burg</title><duration>03:59</duration><date>2016-08-14T20:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><room>Elsewhere</room><abstract>We are going to visit the be
er garden at the Hoepfener Burg (local brewery) and have a sponsored dinner
there.</abstract><start>20:00</start><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>116-centricular_dinner_at_hoepfener_burg</slug></event><event
guid="05eb0f22-c9af-5862-aae8-4bb34772e1e0" id="209"><title>Venue
opens</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T09:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>09:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>209-venue_opens</slug></event><event guid="0e481de3-2119-5f57-8d28-87c17229c2dd"
id="210"><title>Break</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T10:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>10:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>210-break</slug></event><event guid="f33e9765-bd8d-55a8-a166-a3acce71554d"
id="211"><title>Lunch</title><duration>01:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T12:30:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>12:30</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>211-lunch</slug></event><event guid="1cf98b5b-9980-5b3d-a84e-c57c4e90dd64"
id="212"><title>Break</title><duration>00:30</duration><date>2016-08-14T16:00:00+02:00</date><logo
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><attachments /><persons /><type
/><track /><start>16:00</start><abstract /><room>Elsewhere</room><language>eng</language><links /><subtitle
/><slug>212-break</slug></event></room></day></schedule>
\ No newline at end of file
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