320 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
320 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 906
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Title: HPR0906: FOSDEM 2012
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0906/hpr0906.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 04:45:42
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---
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Hey, hey!
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon, and today on Hackerdock Radio, we're going to be
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talking to Pastel Blazer of the Fostam free and open source software developers European
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meeting, which going to Wikipedia is a non-commercial volunteer organization, organized European
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event, set it around free and open source software development. Pastel, how are you? Hi, I'm
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fine. Hi, everyone. Are you having a good day today? Oh, busy. I'm in the middle of preparation,
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so it's the last stage, until the event happens, so that's always a very busy time of the year,
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quite obviously. So, can you tell me what time the event is on, what days it's on? Yeah, so
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essentially it's on the 4th and 5th of February and takes place in Brussels, so it's a weekend.
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Both days are packed with sessions and talks all the time, and we do have a social event on
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Friday evening, which is much appreciated. Actually, I suspect many people to come only
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for that purpose, but which is our beer event on Friday. So yeah, it's essentially on the weekend,
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and just to give you an idea of how busy it is, it is, we'll probably break the 400 session
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barrier this year, I guess, that is packed on two days then. You have 400 concurrent sessions?
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No. In total. Oh, we should. So we had 330, 340, I think, past years, but we have a few more rooms
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this year, so our guests will be around 400. Yeah.
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Craig, that's a lot of conferences, we'll be just happy to have 400 attendees. So how many people
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would you expect to attend then? That's an interesting story on its own, because I mean,
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entrance is free of charge, and we don't even have a registration system. So basically,
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you just show up there, go there, and that's it. That's very nice and very important to us,
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but also makes it quite difficult for us to track or have an estimation of the number of people
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are there. A very safe estimation is around 5,000 people, is what we guess. Wow. That's a lot of people.
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Yeah, it is. Okay. First of all, let's just take a step back here. That's, that's,
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adventure is going to be on Friday night, the Saturday and the Sony. So how would somebody get there?
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Would it be safe to assume that you get to Brussels Medi and then how do you get out to the event
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from there? Oh, our website, actually, this, there's a link on, it's fostham.org. We have a link
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with travel information. So it's a good, good part is Brussels is rather easy to go to. So be it
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by train, by car, or even by plane, which is also an important point for the conference.
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It's very easy to reach at the very least from Europe, but also from overseas.
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When you're in Brussels, being from the airport, you can go through Brussels Medi, which is
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Sautral, which is pretty much a main train station, and there are several options from there. So it's
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something like 15 minutes away by cab. There are buses, trams and many different options,
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which are listed on our website. I think it's much easier to just check it out over there than
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I see you running a bus service and from the event as well. Yeah, we do that on Saturday morning
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and on Sunday afternoon and evening, we rent two large buses, we do non-stop travel from
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the venue to the main station. Yeah. So I guess people stay mostly in Saturday afternoon, dude.
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Yeah, action. Yeah. Okay. Let's move on to the event itself. How long has it been running?
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Depending on which name you take, it's actually the first one was in 2000. So this is going to be
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the 12th edition. Well, the first one had a different name, which was just asked them for open
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source development meeting, but then the second one was faster, but essentially the first
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osdem was in 2000. Yeah. Okay. Have you been involved with this all the time?
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I've been involved starting with the fourth one, if I remember correctly. It's been so long.
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We were just, I mean, it was just one person all alone, half of the Buddha who did the first one.
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It was pretty funny because he didn't actually think that there would be many people showing up,
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and he poked many people for speakers and, you know, hope that just a very few would actually
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become, but everyone said yes, and 300 people showed up for the first one. So that was a very
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good start, and then a few other people joined, but essentially we're, let's say three people doing
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all the work before the conference, with obviously many more people present during the event.
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And I joined, yeah, I think was a fourth one. So we're four of us doing everything before the
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event, and we started expanding and expanding with the options we had at the venue. A very
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important point of first them, which is really, very, very, especially in many ways, is that
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we actually use a complete campus of university, the university Libre de Brucelle,
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it's just, you will be in Brussels, whom very, very kindly put their infrastructure to our
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disposal at a very, let's say, a very good price, which makes many, many things possible,
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such as, it gives us a luxury of actually being able to pick sponsors.
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And also, commercial at all, I understand. Sorry, you're not very commercial at all.
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No, not at all, actually. Not that we have a particular dislike of commercial
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events, but this is really centered around the community, and as far as funcering goes,
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we try to keep the number of sponsors really low and rather go for a long-term,
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midterm relationships with those, you know, also to keep our independence. So sponsors
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don't get much in return. They get their name on the website and the folder we distribute to
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visitors now, that's about it. So they don't get a stand, they don't get vendor talks, etc,
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as it is a customer at pretty much any other conference. And we actually, we thank our sponsors
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for that as well, because they play, I mean, they're fun with that. And it's also possible,
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because I mean, the amount of our expenses are rather low, especially for a conference that
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large, and that's mostly possible thanks to the ULB that puts all their infrastructure on the
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campus or disposal. Although that's at the, all the events I heard that Cisco sponsored your
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networks last year without correct. Yeah. Just because they show that type of sponsorship does
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actually work if somebody who hasn't been having a conference new who sponsored your network. So
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yeah, we do have a building network team too, though, they have been busy at doing the networking
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at Falstown for many, many years, so we try to improve each year. And obviously having a
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support of Cisco, who also, I mean, help us around by well lending us three Cisco engineers
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during the conference, but it's mostly us organizing everything. And also since last year,
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we have a great relationship with the ULB networking team. And I mean, I believe we have the best
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network of any conference on the planet. Let me just give my head around the concept of having
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400 events that you go to, 400 topics that you can go and visit. How do you even begin to manage that?
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So yeah, we have different kind of things of sessions at the conference. First of all,
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we have what we call the main tracks, which we have six tracks or topics with three or four
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talks in each. And those are speakers that we select and invite. So we put together that schedule,
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and that also includes a keynote additionally. And that's one part. So that's a classical,
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talk session lecture kind of thing that happened in two of the largest,
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two largest rooms we have. One has 1,400 seats, one has 800 seats. And another interesting part is
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we do lightning talks, which are probably increasingly popular in many conferences. I think
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those are short, 15 minute talks. They're really fun because the speakers are forced to
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make a point and be really quick with it. And you get to see a lot of interesting projects in a
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short period of time. What we do as well is developer rooms that's arguably the more important part
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of the conference actually. So the concept there is that we have something like 15, 16 lecture rooms
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that we put at disposal of open source projects. We make a call for their rooms, they apply.
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And then we elect. So unfortunately, as we get many, many more requests as we have rooms,
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we have to pick. And we give them the rooms. So they make the schedule in there themselves.
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It goes on a website, etc. But they arrange the management of the room itself. And we increasingly
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will try to, we welcome projects that go together on topics, more and more, rather than individual
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topics. So individual projects, because we believe it's very much a collaboration. And
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I mean, I mostly see first them as a tool. And I mean, none of us make any financial benefit
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from organizing it. But the goal here is to be used as well as possible as a tool. And the big
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thing is pretty much everyone is there. So if you don't use it for collaboration and talking with
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people and exchanging ideas, I believe you're not making very good use of it. So well, those
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dev rooms are developer rooms, many, many projects, Mozilla, Katie, and Ginoom. They're actually together
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and across desktop dev room. And we have a virtualization dev room with many projects and all that
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kind of stuff. And that that's really a very important part. And that makes, I mean, the biggest
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part, obviously, of those 400, but 400 is what my estimation right now, I don't have all the schedules
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from the dev rooms yet, but certainly way above 300. So you pretty much have something like
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15 to 20 sessions in parallel at all times during the weekend. Fantastic. You do, you have a
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fantastic website, but you also have applications that will allow people to select where the talks are.
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Yeah, there are applications for Android. And actually it should show up pretty soon in the
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market. And I believe there is one for iPhone as well that should be around as well. We still have
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to poke the authors to make sure it's there. But yeah, we also provide a booklet that is free to
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every visitor that has a complete schedule. It's on a website itself. We also provide a mobile version
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of the website, but have to be online for that, although we have a billion Wi-Fi network everywhere.
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And I also always hack something that you can print. It's a huge grid of everything, but that
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shows up not quite yet. We'll take a few more weeks. Okay. How are the arrangements for the
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talks? Are they pretty much nailed down to the stage? The main tracks are actually confirmed now.
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So I've put them on the website yesterday. So you can check those out on first and up work.
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And just give the listeners a quick rundown. We have the keynotes. Welcome to Post-Tem
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rethinking system and district development. Freedom out of the box. Then the future of your
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app track beyond traditional mobile links. Yeah, the Linux group kept on coming up. LibraOffice,
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Willand, Ondrahypervices. We have Janus. Janus. Virtualization, KVM, Linux, containers,
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and OpenVZ, native KVM tools, network and IOTRAC, voice, internet trail. It's one of the
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worst of UnixIOs, strategy from certain control group. The system track, CO app.
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They're in caching and tuning, core boot, bringing monitoring into the 21st century,
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community, community ambence burn, while we're doing long caress and stick. And then
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development track, we have a lot of VM, Apache Cassandra, and dev2 ops. So that kind of gives you an
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idea of what's going on. Yeah, the main track. And that's the small part of the conference.
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So that starts, so I guess what time would one month be there on a Friday evening?
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Friday evening, I believe it starts around five or six. And we, well, the theory is,
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or in theory, we do have one of the nicest and largest bars of Brussels, just for us, which is
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the Delirium Café. Funnily enough, it's actually in the Guinness Book of Records because they have
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more than 2,000 beers on their menu. And we have that place just for us on Friday. In practice,
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it turns out we have several bars in the street and pretty much get a whole of the whole street
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there. It's right in the center of Brussels next to the whole place, for those who know who have
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been there or plan going there. Obviously, we do have instructions how to get there on the website.
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Yeah, pretty much stars, five, six, gets busy around seven, eight, and I've heard that there are
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still people there at five a.m. in the morning. So nice for drinking some choppies.
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Beer. Exactly. Very sore head in the morning. I don't think I'll be doing that on the left
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or the event at all. Just a bit of caution there. It's Belgian beers. So it's not your regular beer.
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So yes, if you are cautious, if you are going to have a beer, it should be a Belgian beer. That's my
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motto. Super. We plan to have a table at the event. Could you tell me a little bit about the
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other area? We can cover it yet. Right. We do have stands as well. I'm customary at conferences as
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well. I believe that the head current will be around 48 stands, tables with many projects
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are more than one, obviously. So it's not around 50 projects, but around 30, I think.
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There will be split on three main buildings we have, especially for those who have been at
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first them. Probably quite a lot already listening to this. We do have a new building,
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additionally this year, which pretty much saves our bottoms as far as crowd control goes.
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We will actually move out many stands to that location because it just provides a lot more space.
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Well, it's pretty bare bones. So we put tables over there and the projects or whatever they want
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with it. Now, typically it's showcasing stuff. Obviously, we very much insist that they do
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at their open source projects and showcase open source applications in development, obviously.
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Yes. But it's very, very nice because you get to meet. That, of course, is true for the whole
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conference, but very much for the stands as well. You get to meet the people who do it. So
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you're not going to have some marketing folks talking about their marketing folders,
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but you're going to talk with the people who actually implement that stuff on a day-to-day basis.
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And so that's very, very nice to just hang around and talk with the people over there.
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Yeah. Fantastic. One thing that I've heard about Foster and this is my first time going
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and we're actually happening at table is that there's so much to do and see that it's very
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confusing for people. So do you have any advice for the Foster and you be?
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It's certainly the complaint we get to hear most is that there are so many interesting
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things to do and see at the same time, obviously you can't attend everything, but that's something
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we can live with and that's better than... Well, you don't risk being bored, that's for sure.
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Yeah, I think actually you should look at the schedule a few days before the conference,
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because then you should, it will be complete and see what your interests are. There are really
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many, many things and you can spend a while trying to put together a schedule beforehand.
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That should help, because I said there's so much going on. It's a pretty busy weekend,
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but on the other hand, the atmosphere is very, very relaxed. It probably doesn't go more relaxed in
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this, so everyone you can talk to, just talk to them and don't be shy. And this is really,
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I mean, our motto is by the community, for the community. It's really, very relaxed,
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everyone's very open. You can talk to anyone, that's really, really nice.
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Super, I plan to snatch a few interviews, but I'm down there. So people listen to this,
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we'll be having Foster for the whole year, if it's, if it's something I can't really think,
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like what you're saying. So I just have a few more more questions. What's your favorite
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piece of beer? My favorite piece of beer is the best one in the world. It's a best
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veteran. Yes, indeed. That's the holy grail that is extremely difficult to get hold of.
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Apart from that one, I'd say triple caramel it.
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Yeah, yeah. Not arguing with you on any of these points.
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Yes, and I have one last question, which is also very important.
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Is it true that if a Dutch person asks for directions in Belgium, they will be sent the wrong way?
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I don't know. I'm not Flemish, so I probably don't have the hate of Dutch people that the
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Flemish might have. I'm French and German speaking, so I don't know. Maybe asking English,
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I don't know. No, I don't think that's going to happen. Super. That's, I mean, Brussels is quite
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a cosmopolitan, so most people are French speaking there, but you can get it running with English
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very well. I mean, many, many tourists going there as well, so have no fear. It's not an
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English-speaking country, but it's not going to be an issue in Brussels at all.
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No, it shouldn't be. And the conference itself seems to be an English more or less throughout.
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Completely, everything. Well, just for practical reasons. I think two years ago there was one
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session that was in French, which was a meeting of the French-speaking Mozilla community that
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probably kind of made sense. Yeah, but now everything, everything, 100% is in English, because we
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have people at the very least from everywhere all around Europe going there, and even many, many
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from the US and Canada. So, yeah, it's completely in English. All the talks are in English. All the
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information is in English. Everyone from staff and team speaks English. Yeah. You also have the
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LP certification exams as well. Right. Yeah, just put that one online a few minutes ago, actually.
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Yes, LPI does exams during the weekend, so there are five sessions of almost two hours. We can
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take the exams to have LPIC 1, 2, 3. It's also on the website, so there is link certifications. We
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can check out. We had BSD associates and type of three certifications past years, but I'm still
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waiting for an okay or not okay, so I can't confirm that yet, but it's likely to have that as well
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as options. Okay. I see here also on the website that you have events for spouses and partners
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things to do while. Right. The more political, politically correct term would be partners to
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then. Yeah, we do. We notice that quite a few people do come around with their partner and
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not every couple, not in every couple, we have that both are geekish enough. So we do arrange,
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I believe, two tours, one is not one in Saturday, one on Sunday with a guide through Brussels,
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so it takes pretty much the afternoon. And that sets very nice. There's a lot of
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things to see in Brussels and the feedback of this. I haven't done it a bit too busy in a weekend,
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but we've heard it's very well, well done. Yeah. And practical things like food and the like,
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is there catering at the university? Yes. So there is a very large bar and near one of the
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main rooms. There is a second bar. There's a little bit more often the campus. It's much quieter.
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So you can have breakfast and you can have sandwiches, lots of sandwiches with different, well,
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let's say typically Belgian sandwiches, large. And there's also we have obviously fries,
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fries, and pizza and pasta, kind of stuff, hot food at noon. And throughout the day, you can have
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all sorts of drinks, including Belgian beers, obviously. So seriously folks, it's a bad idea during
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the day. No, it works really fine. Yes, if you have a Belgian or both. We never had any issues
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with that, so I think it's fine. Okay, super. Does it stop for lunch or just go straight through?
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No, everything goes straight through. So we do have like one hour of break on Saturday for the
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main tracks, but on Sunday it goes through. And I mean, the dev rooms, every project manages their
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desk area on their own. They typically have a break, but not everyone does. Well,
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as I said, we provide the talks and it's up to visitors to make the best of it and good luck with that.
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Okay. Make sense. It seems like you have done this before and you know what you're doing really.
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Yeah, it's quite a lot. I mean, it's also what's important to say that the event is
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to be free of charge. I mean, obviously, everyone already has enough expenses in terms of
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accommodation and going there. Brussels is not cheap, but it's not the most expensive, so
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compared to other capitals in Europe, it's certainly not the most expensive, but there are
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several options depending on your budget. You can, we do accept donations, though. So you can get
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the very, very trendy, very nice and absolute street credit, first empty shirt for our 25-year-olds
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donation. They are really nice. And that actually makes an important part. I would say that it makes
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something like 40 percent of our budget comes from the donations. So that actually keeps us,
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gives us the ability of staying independent of taking up too many sponsors or less accommodating
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sponsors. That's quite important. And you can donate more and you get rebate on a railing books
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or a book for free depending on how much you donate. That's welcome. Yeah, I can imagine.
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We also do have what I wanted to mention as well. I mean, we're a team of, I'd say pretty much
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10 people organizing the event beforehand, but during the conference there are many, many people
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helping out. And I mean, it's quite stunning because some, I remember there was a group of
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four people coming from Italy last year and out of those four people, the very least one
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was always helping out at our infodest and stuff like that. So many, many people from the community
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at large do help us out as well. That would be possible, obviously, without their support.
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Fantastic to hear. Quite a lot of people listen to this from the States or Australia or
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different places around the world, Mexico or wherever. And obviously love to come, but probably can't.
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So you recorded any of these events? Right. We probably won't do a live streaming.
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We tried that last year, but we only had a couple of hundreds of people, hundreds of people
|
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following it. So it's not quite worth the hassle. Not sure we're going to do it again, but what we do
|
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is that we do record all the main track talks and the keynotes. We also record lightning talks.
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And we have kind of a conference in the conference, which is the mini distribution mini conference.
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Yeah, I'm going to talk about that actually, which where we record all the talks as well,
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everything will be available through our website. We'll take a few weeks to get encoded and get
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uploaded and put on mirrors, obviously. And we also put everything on YouTube.
|
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So just follow the website. We will announce. We'll be a couple of weeks after the event. So
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everything will be available. You can get it in an open format from our website or from YouTube.
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What license are they on?
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Creative Commons license. I don't remember. But you're not exactly.
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You'd also gather the speaker presentation.
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Yeah, we do our best. Yes, it's always. It's never that easy, but we do,
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yeah, we do annoy them on a regular basis to get the slides and stuff.
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|
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Okay, what we're trying to do here on the HPR network for our visually impaired listeners is to
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take the shells and augment them so that we describe the slides at the back. We're also looking
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for volunteers here to do that. So it helps us a lot if we can get these presentations.
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It makes it easier than having to pause a frame and then try and figure out what the text was.
|
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|
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I was flashing for two seconds. Yeah, so if you can tell your presenters that that's what we're
|
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|
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trying to do, that will help. That's a good point. Yeah, indeed. I want to mention briefly the
|
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cross-distribution conference as well because that's a lot happening there. We actually started that
|
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|
|
two years ago. The thing is that there were many, many Linux distribution projects that we're
|
||
|
|
having a developer room at Phasem. I'm quite obviously quite an important part of open source.
|
||
|
|
But there were so many, almost half the conference was taken by distributions and at some point
|
||
|
|
I decided that, well, let's use Phasem a bit better as a tool, as I mentioned earlier,
|
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|
|
and let's just force them to be together. Yes, I had to force them the first year and some weren't
|
||
|
|
that happy and said, well, can we have our own development? No. But it actually works out very,
|
||
|
|
very well. The sessions are, I mean, the first year was more of a time sharing kind of thing.
|
||
|
|
I do one gen2 talk and then we one opens user talk. But now it's getting more and more
|
||
|
|
into topics and talks that are really about collaborative stuff and
|
||
|
|
comparing and discussing pros and cons of approaches. It actually even gives the ability to,
|
||
|
|
let's say, you know, quoting smaller projects to be able to have a few talks there as well.
|
||
|
|
So that really works out very, very well. It takes place in two of the largest rooms we have
|
||
|
|
also during the whole weekend. So that's an important part of the conference as well.
|
||
|
|
Works out really nice and I'm very, very happy about that. Okay, super fantastic.
|
||
|
|
One of your requirements for tables is to have at the minimum two, you know, at all times.
|
||
|
|
So I would just like to call here, I'm going and I know that other Hitchcock members will be going
|
||
|
|
that I would like somebody to come and volunteer. Ideally, at least one, if not the people could come
|
||
|
|
and volunteer to help us out with the table because while people are manning or
|
||
|
|
warming the desk, I would like a lot of people to go around and grab me interviews for the
|
||
|
|
thing here. So that's just volunteers again, I'd mean a public radio door please.
|
||
|
|
So Pascal, have we missed anything or?
|
||
|
|
I think we've actually mentioned most important things for sure. Yeah.
|
||
|
|
Well, I mean, just to make it real brief, it's a hell of a lot of fun being there.
|
||
|
|
It's very busy, but it's a lot of fun. You get to talk to many, many people who really do that.
|
||
|
|
And I would say that probably at least 90% of the people who go to force them are actively
|
||
|
|
involved and contributing to open-source projects. So not just hackers, you know, people doing
|
||
|
|
all kinds of stuff, contributing, which doesn't mean that if you're genuinely interested,
|
||
|
|
but not contributing, you shouldn't go there, but just to give you an idea that it's really where
|
||
|
|
everyone is to vary these as far as Europe is concerned. And it's a lot of fun.
|
||
|
|
Just one or two questions about accessibility for our listeners who might be
|
||
|
|
confined to wheelchairs. Are there rooms accessible?
|
||
|
|
Most are, not all of them. We do, I mean, the ideal would be to contact us beforehand
|
||
|
|
at infoatfastem.org and we can try to arrange that we can have someone
|
||
|
|
who can help you out in that case, especially to help you guide you and give you a list of rooms
|
||
|
|
that are accessible and which aren't. We're not very good on that. I have to say,
|
||
|
|
that's a kind of stuff we should mention on the website, but we don't.
|
||
|
|
But we do our best to help as far as we can during the conference.
|
||
|
|
Super. Do you have any age restrictions on any of the events?
|
||
|
|
I guess so. Do you have any age restrictions on any of the events
|
||
|
|
or family friendly or would you? There are no age restrictions at all.
|
||
|
|
Apart from the album Friday night. Yes, obviously. You have to be,
|
||
|
|
yeah, I think it's Belgium. In Belgium, it's 16, I think.
|
||
|
|
Super. Listen, thank you very much for taking the time to be with us. Of course,
|
||
|
|
if there's anything that you'd like to update on, if there's a farmer in an email or
|
||
|
|
if we can arrange another entry later on. Look forward to meeting you as the event
|
||
|
|
and I hope it goes very well for you. Yeah, thanks a lot for having me and yeah, see you there.
|
||
|
|
Okay, see you there. Yeah, bye-bye.
|
||
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio,
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