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* Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
@ 2014-12-03  2:28 ` Richard Guy Briggs
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Richard Guy Briggs @ 2014-12-03  2:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netdev, linux-wireless, lwn.net, netdev01

Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
-----------------------------

Netdev 0.1 (year 0, conference 1) is a community-driven conference
geared towards Linux netheads. Linux kernel networking and user 
space utilization of the interfaces to the Linux kernel networking
subsystem are the focus.

There are 4 phases/formats to Netdev 0.1

1) Workshops (day 1)

The workshop format is inspired by Netconf and the wireless
mini-summits, with workshops being centered around existing
networking subsystems. workshops are intended to be an extension of
the mailing list in the sense that many times previous
discussions from the mailing list (or that could otherwise have
happened there) are taken to the round-table to simplify the
decision-making process.

The networking subsystem maintainer(s) should at least prepare a
list of agenda items well before the workshop takes place to allow 
participants to come prepared; this makes the discussions most productive.
Sometimes brain-storming sessions will also be appropriate where
being prepared is less important, for example for discussions
around new user requirements this can be very valuable.

At the workshop meeting itself discussions prevail and notes are
later sent back to the mailing list; presentations are typically
- at the discretion of the chairs - only used where needed to
clarify a problem statement for discussion.

The sitting format is round-table.

2) BOFs (day 1)

BOFs are sessions with a potential to become a workshop in a future
Netdev conference. The lifetime of a BOF may be only one or two 
Netdev conference gatherings. We discourage perpetual BOFs.
BoFs don't need to have an existing networking subsystem or mailing list.
BOFs also don't need to strive to be upgraded to be a Workshop
in the future. Their longevity could only be one conference.
The sitting format could vary and be either lecture or round table format
depending on the proposal.

3) Tutorials (day 2)

Tutorials are generally about 2 hours long (or more at the discretion
of the proposal).
Tutorials are educational in nature and are presented in a classroom 
format with a specific educational outcome for the attendees.

4) Paper proposals (days 3 and 4)

These are classical conference paper + presentations.
Presentations are 30 minutes long with an additional 15 minutes for Q&A
presented in a lecture format.
We will require paper submissions for these sessions. The committee 
believes that a paper submission raises the quality of the presentations
and makes it easier to build on presented ideas in the future.

The Netdev conference this year is structured to be 50% by-invitation 
and 50% submission. We are making sure that we reach out to speakers 
who have interesting relevant topics because we recognize most of 
these folks would typically not be submitting papers to a conference.
The invitation will be made by the technical committee to the individual
speakers for workshop, paper and tutorial sessions.

This call for papers is for the 50% submission portion of the 
conference for paper submissions, tutorials and workshops.
We *highly discourage* submission of recycled talks.

Current technical focus topics include:
- wireless
- performance analysis, debugging and improvement
- networking hardware and offload
- netfilter
- traffic control
- different networking layers (L2/3, etc)
- Internet of things
- security
- additional topics can be suggested

Unlike other conferences, we are going to try and accommodate as many
submissions as possible - but please stay within the relevant topic focus 
and tie to Linux networking to make it easier for the technical committee
to provide quick feedback. In order to give a talk you must be 
registered. If your proposal is accepted you will not be charged 
a conference fee or your conference fee will be refunded to you 
when your talk gets accepted.

We expect minimum of 2 parallel tracks but likely more depending on the
(quantity of submissions) in all phases i.e during tutorials,
workshops and main talks. 

Why you should submit a proposal
---------------------------------
If you yearn for the old community tech driven conferences where 
you mingle with fellow geeks (only these would be Linux networking
geeks) then this would be it. There will be no marketing flashy 
openings. There will just be a pure feed of Linux networking.
Netdev 0.1 will be held back to back with Netconf 2015, the 
by-invite Linux kernel networking workshop 
(http://vger.kernel.org/netconf2015.html). 
So gurus of all sorts will be there mingling and giving talks.
While there will be heavy Linux kernel influence we expect a lot
of user space presence as well. 

How to submit a proposal
------------------------
Send email to  netdev01@lists.netfilter.org with a paragraph or
two of your proposal.
For paper proposals, if your submission is accepted we will provide
you a template to use.
A minimum of two pages is needed so as to to allow people to skip the 
burden of writing a large paper. The maximum page limit is 10 pages.

Location:
---------
Downtown Ottawa, Canada
www.netdev01.org

Important Dates:
----------------
December 02, 2014	 	Call for Papers opens
December 10, 2014	 	Registration opens
January 10, 2015	 	Call for sessions deadline
January 20, 2015	 	Conference schedule announced
February 14-17, 2015            Conference days

Please register as soon as registration opens up on December 10.
Registering helps us plan properly for numbers of attendees,
ensuring venue sizes and supplies are appropriate without
wasting resources.



	slainte mhath, RGB

--
Richard Guy Briggs               --  ~\    -- ~\            <hpv.tricolour.net>
<www.TriColour.ca>                 --  \___   o \@       @       Ride yer bike!
Ottawa, ON, CANADA                  --  Lo_>__M__\\/\%__\\/\%
Vote! -- <greenparty.ca>_____GTVS6#790__(*)__(*)________(*)(*)_________________

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

* Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
@ 2014-12-03  2:28 ` Richard Guy Briggs
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Richard Guy Briggs @ 2014-12-03  2:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netdev-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA,
	linux-wireless-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA,
	lwn.net-WsCbK3Kd604hZSLhaPfTA7DIv+2fBXtB,
	netdev01-wool9L35kiczKOhml7GhPkB+6BGkLq7r

Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
-----------------------------

Netdev 0.1 (year 0, conference 1) is a community-driven conference
geared towards Linux netheads. Linux kernel networking and user 
space utilization of the interfaces to the Linux kernel networking
subsystem are the focus.

There are 4 phases/formats to Netdev 0.1

1) Workshops (day 1)

The workshop format is inspired by Netconf and the wireless
mini-summits, with workshops being centered around existing
networking subsystems. workshops are intended to be an extension of
the mailing list in the sense that many times previous
discussions from the mailing list (or that could otherwise have
happened there) are taken to the round-table to simplify the
decision-making process.

The networking subsystem maintainer(s) should at least prepare a
list of agenda items well before the workshop takes place to allow 
participants to come prepared; this makes the discussions most productive.
Sometimes brain-storming sessions will also be appropriate where
being prepared is less important, for example for discussions
around new user requirements this can be very valuable.

At the workshop meeting itself discussions prevail and notes are
later sent back to the mailing list; presentations are typically
- at the discretion of the chairs - only used where needed to
clarify a problem statement for discussion.

The sitting format is round-table.

2) BOFs (day 1)

BOFs are sessions with a potential to become a workshop in a future
Netdev conference. The lifetime of a BOF may be only one or two 
Netdev conference gatherings. We discourage perpetual BOFs.
BoFs don't need to have an existing networking subsystem or mailing list.
BOFs also don't need to strive to be upgraded to be a Workshop
in the future. Their longevity could only be one conference.
The sitting format could vary and be either lecture or round table format
depending on the proposal.

3) Tutorials (day 2)

Tutorials are generally about 2 hours long (or more at the discretion
of the proposal).
Tutorials are educational in nature and are presented in a classroom 
format with a specific educational outcome for the attendees.

4) Paper proposals (days 3 and 4)

These are classical conference paper + presentations.
Presentations are 30 minutes long with an additional 15 minutes for Q&A
presented in a lecture format.
We will require paper submissions for these sessions. The committee 
believes that a paper submission raises the quality of the presentations
and makes it easier to build on presented ideas in the future.

The Netdev conference this year is structured to be 50% by-invitation 
and 50% submission. We are making sure that we reach out to speakers 
who have interesting relevant topics because we recognize most of 
these folks would typically not be submitting papers to a conference.
The invitation will be made by the technical committee to the individual
speakers for workshop, paper and tutorial sessions.

This call for papers is for the 50% submission portion of the 
conference for paper submissions, tutorials and workshops.
We *highly discourage* submission of recycled talks.

Current technical focus topics include:
- wireless
- performance analysis, debugging and improvement
- networking hardware and offload
- netfilter
- traffic control
- different networking layers (L2/3, etc)
- Internet of things
- security
- additional topics can be suggested

Unlike other conferences, we are going to try and accommodate as many
submissions as possible - but please stay within the relevant topic focus 
and tie to Linux networking to make it easier for the technical committee
to provide quick feedback. In order to give a talk you must be 
registered. If your proposal is accepted you will not be charged 
a conference fee or your conference fee will be refunded to you 
when your talk gets accepted.

We expect minimum of 2 parallel tracks but likely more depending on the
(quantity of submissions) in all phases i.e during tutorials,
workshops and main talks. 

Why you should submit a proposal
---------------------------------
If you yearn for the old community tech driven conferences where 
you mingle with fellow geeks (only these would be Linux networking
geeks) then this would be it. There will be no marketing flashy 
openings. There will just be a pure feed of Linux networking.
Netdev 0.1 will be held back to back with Netconf 2015, the 
by-invite Linux kernel networking workshop 
(http://vger.kernel.org/netconf2015.html). 
So gurus of all sorts will be there mingling and giving talks.
While there will be heavy Linux kernel influence we expect a lot
of user space presence as well. 

How to submit a proposal
------------------------
Send email to  netdev01-wool9L35kiczKOhml7GhPkB+6BGkLq7r@public.gmane.org with a paragraph or
two of your proposal.
For paper proposals, if your submission is accepted we will provide
you a template to use.
A minimum of two pages is needed so as to to allow people to skip the 
burden of writing a large paper. The maximum page limit is 10 pages.

Location:
---------
Downtown Ottawa, Canada
www.netdev01.org

Important Dates:
----------------
December 02, 2014	 	Call for Papers opens
December 10, 2014	 	Registration opens
January 10, 2015	 	Call for sessions deadline
January 20, 2015	 	Conference schedule announced
February 14-17, 2015            Conference days

Please register as soon as registration opens up on December 10.
Registering helps us plan properly for numbers of attendees,
ensuring venue sizes and supplies are appropriate without
wasting resources.



	slainte mhath, RGB

--
Richard Guy Briggs               --  ~\    -- ~\            <hpv.tricolour.net>
<www.TriColour.ca>                 --  \___   o \@       @       Ride yer bike!
Ottawa, ON, CANADA                  --  Lo_>__M__\\/\%__\\/\%
Vote! -- <greenparty.ca>_____GTVS6#790__(*)__(*)________(*)(*)_________________
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in
the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

* wireless workshop - was: Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
  2014-12-03  2:28 ` Richard Guy Briggs
  (?)
@ 2014-12-03  8:24 ` Johannes Berg
  2014-12-11 19:12   ` Johannes Berg
  -1 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Johannes Berg @ 2014-12-03  8:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Richard Guy Briggs; +Cc: netdev, linux-wireless, lwn.net, netdev01

On Tue, 2014-12-02 at 21:28 -0500, Richard Guy Briggs wrote:

> 1) Workshops (day 1)

FWIW, we're planning a wireless summit as a workshop here, which should
give us a little more breathing room than e.g. the 3-hour slot at LPC.
I'll put up the wiki page and other things and start working on an
agenda when I'm back home next week.

Wireless-related submissions for the remainder of the conference are
also very welcome and encouraged!

johannes


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

* Re: wireless workshop - was: Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
  2014-12-03  8:24 ` wireless workshop - was: " Johannes Berg
@ 2014-12-11 19:12   ` Johannes Berg
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Johannes Berg @ 2014-12-11 19:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-wireless

On Wed, 2014-12-03 at 09:24 +0100, Johannes Berg wrote:

> FWIW, we're planning a wireless summit as a workshop here, which should
> give us a little more breathing room than e.g. the 3-hour slot at LPC.
> I'll put up the wiki page and other things and start working on an
> agenda when I'm back home next week.

I've put up a very very very early version of the wiki page here:

http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Summits/Ottawa-2015

Please submit topics for the workshop.

> Wireless-related submissions for the remainder of the conference are
> also very welcome and encouraged!

These would be papers for the remainder of the conference, separate from
the discussion topics for the workshop and for the bigger conference
audience.

johannes


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

* NetDev 0.1 Attendee clarification [was: Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals]
  2014-12-03  2:28 ` Richard Guy Briggs
@ 2014-12-12 15:09   ` Richard Guy Briggs
  -1 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Richard Guy Briggs @ 2014-12-12 15:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netdev, linux-wireless, lwn, netdev01, lartc, netfilter, netfilter-devel

On 14/12/02, Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
> Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
> -----------------------------
> 
> Netdev 0.1 (year 0, conference 1) is a community-driven conference
> geared towards Linux netheads. Linux kernel networking and user 
> space utilization of the interfaces to the Linux kernel networking
> subsystem are the focus.

Hello fellow Linux NetHeads, sorry for the noise:

There seems to have been some questions about the intended audience for this
conference.

The 50/50 by-invitation/submission slots are for the *presenters* of the talks
and not for the audience of attendees.  *Anyone* with an interest in Linux
networking is welcome to attend this conference.

We're very sorry for the confusion and welcome you to join us.

Cheers.

> There are 4 phases/formats to Netdev 0.1
> 
> 1) Workshops (day 1)
> 
> The workshop format is inspired by Netconf and the wireless
> mini-summits, with workshops being centered around existing
> networking subsystems. workshops are intended to be an extension of
> the mailing list in the sense that many times previous
> discussions from the mailing list (or that could otherwise have
> happened there) are taken to the round-table to simplify the
> decision-making process.
> 
> The networking subsystem maintainer(s) should at least prepare a
> list of agenda items well before the workshop takes place to allow 
> participants to come prepared; this makes the discussions most productive.
> Sometimes brain-storming sessions will also be appropriate where
> being prepared is less important, for example for discussions
> around new user requirements this can be very valuable.
> 
> At the workshop meeting itself discussions prevail and notes are
> later sent back to the mailing list; presentations are typically
> - at the discretion of the chairs - only used where needed to
> clarify a problem statement for discussion.
> 
> The sitting format is round-table.
> 
> 2) BOFs (day 1)
> 
> BOFs are sessions with a potential to become a workshop in a future
> Netdev conference. The lifetime of a BOF may be only one or two 
> Netdev conference gatherings. We discourage perpetual BOFs.
> BoFs don't need to have an existing networking subsystem or mailing list.
> BOFs also don't need to strive to be upgraded to be a Workshop
> in the future. Their longevity could only be one conference.
> The sitting format could vary and be either lecture or round table format
> depending on the proposal.
> 
> 3) Tutorials (day 2)
> 
> Tutorials are generally about 2 hours long (or more at the discretion
> of the proposal).
> Tutorials are educational in nature and are presented in a classroom 
> format with a specific educational outcome for the attendees.
> 
> 4) Paper proposals (days 3 and 4)
> 
> These are classical conference paper + presentations.
> Presentations are 30 minutes long with an additional 15 minutes for Q&A
> presented in a lecture format.
> We will require paper submissions for these sessions. The committee 
> believes that a paper submission raises the quality of the presentations
> and makes it easier to build on presented ideas in the future.
> 
> The Netdev conference this year is structured to be 50% by-invitation 
> and 50% submission. We are making sure that we reach out to speakers 
> who have interesting relevant topics because we recognize most of 
> these folks would typically not be submitting papers to a conference.
> The invitation will be made by the technical committee to the individual
> speakers for workshop, paper and tutorial sessions.

Clarification is that the presenters will be split 50/50 invitation/submission
and that regular attendance is open to anyone and we will welcome anyone to
join the conference audience.

> This call for papers is for the 50% submission portion of the 
> conference for paper submissions, tutorials and workshops.
> We *highly discourage* submission of recycled talks.
> 
> Current technical focus topics include:
> - wireless
> - performance analysis, debugging and improvement
> - networking hardware and offload
> - netfilter
> - traffic control
> - different networking layers (L2/3, etc)
> - Internet of things
> - security
> - additional topics can be suggested
> 
> Unlike other conferences, we are going to try and accommodate as many
> submissions as possible - but please stay within the relevant topic focus 
> and tie to Linux networking to make it easier for the technical committee
> to provide quick feedback. In order to give a talk you must be 
> registered. If your proposal is accepted you will not be charged 
> a conference fee or your conference fee will be refunded to you 
> when your talk gets accepted.
> 
> We expect minimum of 2 parallel tracks but likely more depending on the
> (quantity of submissions) in all phases i.e during tutorials,
> workshops and main talks. 
> 
> Why you should submit a proposal
> ---------------------------------
> If you yearn for the old community tech driven conferences where 
> you mingle with fellow geeks (only these would be Linux networking
> geeks) then this would be it. There will be no marketing flashy 
> openings. There will just be a pure feed of Linux networking.
> Netdev 0.1 will be held back to back with Netconf 2015, the 
> by-invite Linux kernel networking workshop 
> (http://vger.kernel.org/netconf2015.html). 
> So gurus of all sorts will be there mingling and giving talks.
> While there will be heavy Linux kernel influence we expect a lot
> of user space presence as well. 
> 
> How to submit a proposal
> ------------------------
> Send email to  netdev01@lists.netfilter.org with a paragraph or
> two of your proposal.
> For paper proposals, if your submission is accepted we will provide
> you a template to use.
> A minimum of two pages is needed so as to to allow people to skip the 
> burden of writing a large paper. The maximum page limit is 10 pages.
> 
> Location:
> ---------
> Downtown Ottawa, Canada
> www.netdev01.org
> 
> Important Dates:
> ----------------
> December 02, 2014	 	Call for Papers opens
> December 10, 2014	 	Registration opens
> January 10, 2015	 	Call for sessions deadline
> January 20, 2015	 	Conference schedule announced
> February 14-17, 2015            Conference days
> 
> Please register as soon as registration opens up on December 10.
> Registering helps us plan properly for numbers of attendees,
> ensuring venue sizes and supplies are appropriate without
> wasting resources.
> 
> 
> 
> 	slainte mhath, RGB

	slainte mhath, RGB

--
Richard Guy Briggs               --  ~\    -- ~\             <hpv.tricolour.ca>
<www.TriColour.ca>                 --  \___   o \@      @        Ride yer bike!
Ottawa, ON, CANADA                  --  Lo_>__M__\\/\%__\\/\%
Vote! -- <greenparty.ca>_____GTVS6#790__(*)__(*)________(*)(*)_________________

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

* NetDev 0.1 Attendee clarification [was: Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals]
@ 2014-12-12 15:09   ` Richard Guy Briggs
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Richard Guy Briggs @ 2014-12-12 15:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netdev, linux-wireless, lwn, netdev01, lartc, netfilter, netfilter-devel

On 14/12/02, Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
> Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
> -----------------------------
> 
> Netdev 0.1 (year 0, conference 1) is a community-driven conference
> geared towards Linux netheads. Linux kernel networking and user 
> space utilization of the interfaces to the Linux kernel networking
> subsystem are the focus.

Hello fellow Linux NetHeads, sorry for the noise:

There seems to have been some questions about the intended audience for this
conference.

The 50/50 by-invitation/submission slots are for the *presenters* of the talks
and not for the audience of attendees.  *Anyone* with an interest in Linux
networking is welcome to attend this conference.

We're very sorry for the confusion and welcome you to join us.

Cheers.

> There are 4 phases/formats to Netdev 0.1
> 
> 1) Workshops (day 1)
> 
> The workshop format is inspired by Netconf and the wireless
> mini-summits, with workshops being centered around existing
> networking subsystems. workshops are intended to be an extension of
> the mailing list in the sense that many times previous
> discussions from the mailing list (or that could otherwise have
> happened there) are taken to the round-table to simplify the
> decision-making process.
> 
> The networking subsystem maintainer(s) should at least prepare a
> list of agenda items well before the workshop takes place to allow 
> participants to come prepared; this makes the discussions most productive.
> Sometimes brain-storming sessions will also be appropriate where
> being prepared is less important, for example for discussions
> around new user requirements this can be very valuable.
> 
> At the workshop meeting itself discussions prevail and notes are
> later sent back to the mailing list; presentations are typically
> - at the discretion of the chairs - only used where needed to
> clarify a problem statement for discussion.
> 
> The sitting format is round-table.
> 
> 2) BOFs (day 1)
> 
> BOFs are sessions with a potential to become a workshop in a future
> Netdev conference. The lifetime of a BOF may be only one or two 
> Netdev conference gatherings. We discourage perpetual BOFs.
> BoFs don't need to have an existing networking subsystem or mailing list.
> BOFs also don't need to strive to be upgraded to be a Workshop
> in the future. Their longevity could only be one conference.
> The sitting format could vary and be either lecture or round table format
> depending on the proposal.
> 
> 3) Tutorials (day 2)
> 
> Tutorials are generally about 2 hours long (or more at the discretion
> of the proposal).
> Tutorials are educational in nature and are presented in a classroom 
> format with a specific educational outcome for the attendees.
> 
> 4) Paper proposals (days 3 and 4)
> 
> These are classical conference paper + presentations.
> Presentations are 30 minutes long with an additional 15 minutes for Q&A
> presented in a lecture format.
> We will require paper submissions for these sessions. The committee 
> believes that a paper submission raises the quality of the presentations
> and makes it easier to build on presented ideas in the future.
> 
> The Netdev conference this year is structured to be 50% by-invitation 
> and 50% submission. We are making sure that we reach out to speakers 
> who have interesting relevant topics because we recognize most of 
> these folks would typically not be submitting papers to a conference.
> The invitation will be made by the technical committee to the individual
> speakers for workshop, paper and tutorial sessions.

Clarification is that the presenters will be split 50/50 invitation/submission
and that regular attendance is open to anyone and we will welcome anyone to
join the conference audience.

> This call for papers is for the 50% submission portion of the 
> conference for paper submissions, tutorials and workshops.
> We *highly discourage* submission of recycled talks.
> 
> Current technical focus topics include:
> - wireless
> - performance analysis, debugging and improvement
> - networking hardware and offload
> - netfilter
> - traffic control
> - different networking layers (L2/3, etc)
> - Internet of things
> - security
> - additional topics can be suggested
> 
> Unlike other conferences, we are going to try and accommodate as many
> submissions as possible - but please stay within the relevant topic focus 
> and tie to Linux networking to make it easier for the technical committee
> to provide quick feedback. In order to give a talk you must be 
> registered. If your proposal is accepted you will not be charged 
> a conference fee or your conference fee will be refunded to you 
> when your talk gets accepted.
> 
> We expect minimum of 2 parallel tracks but likely more depending on the
> (quantity of submissions) in all phases i.e during tutorials,
> workshops and main talks. 
> 
> Why you should submit a proposal
> ---------------------------------
> If you yearn for the old community tech driven conferences where 
> you mingle with fellow geeks (only these would be Linux networking
> geeks) then this would be it. There will be no marketing flashy 
> openings. There will just be a pure feed of Linux networking.
> Netdev 0.1 will be held back to back with Netconf 2015, the 
> by-invite Linux kernel networking workshop 
> (http://vger.kernel.org/netconf2015.html). 
> So gurus of all sorts will be there mingling and giving talks.
> While there will be heavy Linux kernel influence we expect a lot
> of user space presence as well. 
> 
> How to submit a proposal
> ------------------------
> Send email to  netdev01@lists.netfilter.org with a paragraph or
> two of your proposal.
> For paper proposals, if your submission is accepted we will provide
> you a template to use.
> A minimum of two pages is needed so as to to allow people to skip the 
> burden of writing a large paper. The maximum page limit is 10 pages.
> 
> Location:
> ---------
> Downtown Ottawa, Canada
> www.netdev01.org
> 
> Important Dates:
> ----------------
> December 02, 2014	 	Call for Papers opens
> December 10, 2014	 	Registration opens
> January 10, 2015	 	Call for sessions deadline
> January 20, 2015	 	Conference schedule announced
> February 14-17, 2015            Conference days
> 
> Please register as soon as registration opens up on December 10.
> Registering helps us plan properly for numbers of attendees,
> ensuring venue sizes and supplies are appropriate without
> wasting resources.
> 
> 
> 
> 	slainte mhath, RGB

	slainte mhath, RGB

--
Richard Guy Briggs               --  ~\    -- ~\             <hpv.tricolour.ca>
<www.TriColour.ca>                 --  \___   o \@      @        Ride yer bike!
Ottawa, ON, CANADA                  --  Lo_>__M__\\/\%__\\/\%
Vote! -- <greenparty.ca>_____GTVS6#790__(*)__(*)________(*)(*)_________________

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

* Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
@ 2014-12-03 14:06 Pablo Neira Ayuso
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Pablo Neira Ayuso @ 2014-12-03 14:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netfilter-devel, netfilter
  Cc: Brenda Butler, Richard Guy Briggs, Jamal Hadi Salim

Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals
-----------------------------

Netdev 0.1 (year 0, conference 1) is a community-driven conference
geared towards Linux netheads. Linux kernel networking and user
space utilization of the interfaces to the Linux kernel networking
subsystem are the focus.

There are 4 phases/formats to Netdev 0.1

1) Workshops (day 1)

The workshop format is inspired by Netconf and the wireless
mini-summits, with workshops being centered around existing
networking subsystems. workshops are intended to be an extension of
the mailing list in the sense that many times previous
discussions from the mailing list (or that could otherwise have
happened there) are taken to the round-table to simplify the
decision-making process.

The networking subsystem maintainer(s) should at least prepare a
list of agenda items well before the workshop takes place to allow
participants to come prepared; this makes the discussions most productive.
Sometimes brain-storming sessions will also be appropriate where
being prepared is less important, for example for discussions
around new user requirements this can be very valuable.

At the workshop meeting itself discussions prevail and notes are
later sent back to the mailing list; presentations are typically
- at the discretion of the chairs - only used where needed to
clarify a problem statement for discussion.

The sitting format is round-table.

2) BOFs (day 1)

BOFs are sessions with a potential to become a workshop in a future
Netdev conference. The lifetime of a BOF may be only one or two
Netdev conference gatherings. We discourage perpetual BOFs.
BoFs don't need to have an existing networking subsystem or mailing list.
BOFs also don't need to strive to be upgraded to be a Workshop
in the future. Their longevity could only be one conference.
The sitting format could vary and be either lecture or round table format
depending on the proposal.

3) Tutorials (day 2)

Tutorials are generally about 2 hours long (or more at the discretion
of the proposal).
Tutorials are educational in nature and are presented in a classroom
format with a specific educational outcome for the attendees.

4) Paper proposals (days 3 and 4)

These are classical conference paper + presentations.
Presentations are 30 minutes long with an additional 15 minutes for Q&A
presented in a lecture format.
We will require paper submissions for these sessions. The committee
believes that a paper submission raises the quality of the presentations
and makes it easier to build on presented ideas in the future.

The Netdev conference this year is structured to be 50% by-invitation
and 50% submission. We are making sure that we reach out to speakers
who have interesting relevant topics because we recognize most of
these folks would typically not be submitting papers to a conference.
The invitation will be made by the technical committee to the individual
speakers for workshop, paper and tutorial sessions.

This call for papers is for the 50% submission portion of the
conference for paper submissions, tutorials and workshops.
We *highly discourage* submission of recycled talks.

Current technical focus topics include:
- wireless
- performance analysis, debugging and improvement
- networking hardware and offload
- netfilter
- traffic control
- different networking layers (L2/3, etc)
- Internet of things
- security
- additional topics can be suggested

Unlike other conferences, we are going to try and accommodate as many
submissions as possible - but please stay within the relevant topic focus
and tie to Linux networking to make it easier for the technical committee
to provide quick feedback. In order to give a talk you must be
registered. If your proposal is accepted you will not be charged
a conference fee or your conference fee will be refunded to you
when your talk gets accepted.

We expect minimum of 2 parallel tracks but likely more depending on the
(quantity of submissions) in all phases i.e during tutorials,
workshops and main talks.

Why you should submit a proposal
---------------------------------
If you yearn for the old community tech driven conferences where
you mingle with fellow geeks (only these would be Linux networking
geeks) then this would be it. There will be no marketing flashy
openings. There will just be a pure feed of Linux networking.
Netdev 0.1 will be held back to back with Netconf 2015, the
by-invite Linux kernel networking workshop
(http://vger.kernel.org/netconf2015.html).
So gurus of all sorts will be there mingling and giving talks.
While there will be heavy Linux kernel influence we expect a lot
of user space presence as well.

How to submit a proposal
------------------------
Send email to  netdev01@lists.netfilter.org with a paragraph or
two of your proposal.
For paper proposals, if your submission is accepted we will provide
you a template to use.
A minimum of two pages is needed so as to to allow people to skip the
burden of writing a large paper. The maximum page limit is 10 pages.

Location:
---------
Downtown Ottawa, Canada
www.netdev01.org

Important Dates:
----------------
December 02, 2014	 	Call for Papers opens
December 10, 2014	 	Registration opens
January 10, 2015	 	Call for sessions deadline
January 20, 2015	 	Conference schedule announced
February 14-17, 2015            Conference days

Please register as soon as registration opens up on December 10.
Registering helps us plan properly for numbers of attendees,
ensuring venue sizes and supplies are appropriate without
wasting resources.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2014-12-12 15:09 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2014-12-03  2:28 Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals Richard Guy Briggs
2014-12-03  2:28 ` Richard Guy Briggs
2014-12-03  8:24 ` wireless workshop - was: " Johannes Berg
2014-12-11 19:12   ` Johannes Berg
2014-12-12 15:09 ` NetDev 0.1 Attendee clarification [was: Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals] Richard Guy Briggs
2014-12-12 15:09   ` Richard Guy Briggs
2014-12-03 14:06 Netdev 0.1 Call for Proposals Pablo Neira Ayuso

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