Hi Caryl,
At this point we're only able to commit to 1 room for 1 day. We'd also still need some of the items we discussed earlier in thread to confirm OSSIE again.
1) Track Leads (sounds like we have this) 2) A track abstract describing the audience and types of sessions you want to see.
It'd also be great to understand how we see this complimenting other similar tracks, like the work being done in OSSIE.
Thanks for your efforts here.
Ilan
Ilan Rabinovitch Conference Chair Southern California Linux Expo 877-831-2569 x110 Voice 818-442-1865 Mobile ilan@linuxfests.org Email
--- Ask me about sponsorship and speaking opportunities at LinuxFests.org's upcoming events: DevOps Days SV - June 24-25, 2016 - Mountain View, CA Texas Linux Fest - July 8-9, 2016, Austin TX SCALE 15x - March 2-5, 2017 - Pasadena, CA
On Wed, Aug 3, 2016 at 9:09 PM, Caryl Bigenho cbigenho@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi Folks,
To summarize our discussion so far, Kenneth Wyrick and I will work on having an OSSIE track for SCaLE. Others who wish to help us are welcome to join in.
We need to decide what day would be best for OSSIE, or whether it might be extended over more than one day. If extended, what days.
We need to explore the possibility of getting one of the local community colleges on board to grant college credit (typically one unit with a small fee) to attendees who attend a specified number of hours and certain specified events/presentations at SCaLE.
We need to line up speakers to fill the OSSIE slots. Joe Renzullo has already volunteered and his topic sounds very interesting. (Thank you Joe!)
We need to study the interests shown in the various recent and coming CUE meetings and conferences to see what topics are most timely now and try to find ways open source can meet those interests… then look for speakers we could use on those topics. One topic we should definitely look into is "Why open source in education?"
When we have all of our "ducks in a row" we need to begin an earnest publicity campaign to reach teachers (through CUE and other organizations) and others who might be interested.
We need to see whether there is any possibility of a sponsor for OSSIE who might be able to fund some really interesting speaker.
For example: Matt and Kaitlyn Hova (who live in Nebraska) would possibly be a terrific keynote type presentation that would be of interest to any and all attendees (not just OSSIE). Kaitlyn is going to be doing a talk for TED-Med. She also plays one of their 3-D printed violins (they call it a "Hovalin") as part of her presentation. What if we had her (maybe both of them) as a speaker(s), say on Friday, and printed one of their hovalins during the course of SCaLE. I don't know how long it would take, but the cost to make it is about $70, which I think includes strings, bridge, pegs, etc. Maybe it could be a raffle prize. How does this relate to OSSIE? STEAM at its best! STEAM is STEM with an A added for Arts!
Fill in the blanks…. there are lots!
Caryl
From: ilan@socallinuxexpo.org Date: Wed, 3 Aug 2016 17:21:13 -0700 To: scale-planning@lists.linuxfests.org Subject: Re: [Scale-planning] Open Source in Education Track (was Re: About the Open Data Track)
Ya, we've also had OSSIE sessions with 5-10 people in the room. So as you can imagine the range varies depending on the topic, etc.
Ilan Rabinovitch Conference Chair Southern California Linux Expo 877-831-2569 x110 Voice 818-442-1865 Mobile ilan@linuxfests.org Email
Ask me about sponsorship and speaking opportunities at LinuxFests.org's upcoming events: DevOps Days SV - June 24-25, 2016 - Mountain View, CA Texas Linux Fest - July 8-9, 2016, Austin TX SCALE 15x - March 2-5, 2017 - Pasadena, CA
On Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 11:04 AM, Hriday Balachandran < bala@socallinuxexpo.org> wrote:
Hi Ken,
OSSIE specific attendance is hard to predict. Some talks are rather popular, and some are not. On an average, I think 35-45 people attend the talks. The really popular ones approach three figures.
The way I have handled OSSIE talks has been a mix of CFP submissions and curated/invited talks. 5-6 talks are generally the target.
Bala.
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 10:50 PM, Kenneth Wyrick kmw@caltek.net wrote:
I'd like to know what kind of numbers we are talking about for a track and how one typically goes about assessing and forecasting the participation both on the presentation and attendance side?
<quote who="Caryl Bigenho"> Hi Ilan, Why don't you let Kenneth Wyrick and I see if we can get this going? You have given us a list of things to work on below and we can get started right away with such things as whether Friday or Saturday would work best and how to get more educators to attend.* As I see it, an OSSIE track shouldn't be just for educators. With so many parents getting involved in the technology side of their children's education, things like the Khan Academy videos, Hour of Code and Scratch/ScratchJr are things that will have a wider audience than just professional educators. Caryl * Maybe we could get a unit of college credit for folks who attend the entire OSSIE day and pay a small fee. Teachers can use this type of credit for professional development and, often, it can count toward increases in salary.
From: ilan@socallinuxexpo.org Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2016 14:45:05 -0700 To: scale-planning@lists.linuxfests.org; bala@socallinuxexpo.org Subject: [Scale-planning] Open Source in Education Track (was Re: About the Open Data Track)
We haven't yet made a decision around OSSIE for this year, but as a track it has seen reduced attendance and submissions over the past few years. If we can come up with some concrete plans around what we'd want it to look like and discuss how we can get teachers to attend I'm sure we'd be happy to arrange space again. Another thing to keep in mind is we've gotten mixed feedback from teachers on what day to hold OSSIE on if we continue to do so. On the one hand we hear from many teachers they can't attend during the weekend as they have trouble getting the school district to give them a day off for the conference. On the other hand, we also hear from them that they prefer to keep their weekends to themselves rather than for training.
-Ilan
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 2:26 PM, Caryl Bigenho cbigenho@hotmail.com wrote: Hi Folks, I've been watching silently from afar (summer in Montana). It looks like everything is coming along well, except for one thing that seems to be entirely missing: OSSIE (Open Source Software In Education.) A few years back there was still a dedicated OSSIE track. Have you given up entirely on having one? If not, I'll be happy to volunteer to help organize, publicize, coordinate, and do what ever else needs to be done to make it happen. Just let me know!Caryl
Sent from my iPhone On Aug 1, 2016, at 1:46 PM, Ilan Rabinovitch ilan@socallinuxexpo.org wrote:
Hello Juan, The local big data community has been running a data tools/big data track the last few years of SCALE. It's possible that what you're looking for might be covered there? OpenData in general has been a topic we've had requests for over the years, so we decided to add a one day track around it. That being said I think your email highlights an important point. We find a lot of confusion from both attendees and speakers about what is relevant for a given track each year. E.g. Is intro to kernel development a talk that belongs in the introductory/beginner track, a kernel track, or a developer track? With that in mind we have been looking to recruit experts around each track to help serve as "track leads". The role involves writing a one paragraph abstract describing what type of content we are seeking for that track, helping to do targeted recruitment for invited speakers on those tracks, and finally participating in the voting/review process of sessions submitted via the CFP. Here is an example of what QCon has done for these track descriptions === Track: Containers - From Dev to ProdAbstract: Containers came to prominence a couple of years ago with thepromise of portability, flexibility and rapid deployments. They remain a hot topic in the industry and there are several success stories of companiesderiving business value from the use of containers; especially in the area of developer experience. At the same time, container technology and thesurrounding ecosystem are evolving very rapidly, which makes it difficult to assess its readiness for production use. In this track, we will hear from practitioners who are leveraging containers as part of their software delivery processes for a better developerexperience, simplified operations, efficient resource utilization, or all of the above. Speakers will share their experiences in tackling the complex challenges around CI/CD, scheduling and orchestration, service discovery, monitoring etc. andwhat it takes to truly reap the benefits of container technology.Track Lead(s): Sangeeta Narayanan, Netflix
=== This makes it very clear what the goal of the track is and what type of content they're seeking. If you see a track on the CFP that you think you'd be a good fit to lead, reach out to myself and Shyam (kapadia@socallinuxexpo.org). We'd love to have your help. We're seeing at least 1 person per track, with 2 leads per track max. Thanks,Ilan
Ilan Rabinovitch Conference ChairSouthern California Linux Expo877-831-2569 x110 Voice 818-442-1865 Mobileilan@linuxfests.org Email ---Ask me about sponsorship and speaking opportunities at LinuxFests.org's upcoming events:DevOps Days SV - June 24-25, 2016 - Mountain View, CA Texas Linux Fest - July 8-9, 2016, Austin TXSCALE 15x - March 2-5, 2017 - Pasadena, CA
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 10:56 AM, Juan J. Natera naterajj@gmail.com wrote: Hi,
I was taking a look at the CFP page
(http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/15x/cfp), when I read the
description of the Open Data track, which I quote here:
"Open Data - This newly introduced track will focus on topics related
to Open Data in Science, Government, and other sources. This will
strive to answer questions such as: Why does Open Data Matter? What
are benefits of Open Data? What are the goals of the Open Data
movement? What is its current status?"
As an Open Source enthusiast, I wholeheartedly agree with the
importance of Open Data, and realize there is a long road ahead of
those working to address this issue. However I believe that this
track, as described, would be more at home as a keynote in Data
focused conference. I am not saying it goes against SCALE's mission to
have this kind of content, far from it. but speaking also as an
attendee, I think SCALE users would be more interested in Open Source
tools for working with data (big or small), since it's already obvious
for most scale attendees that Open Data is just as good as Open Source
software.
I also realize that Big Data is mentioned in the Cloud Track, but
isn't there enough interest in this topic to deserve its own track?
Some food for thought,
Thanks,
Juan
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