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The 2006 Ottawa Linux Symposium

Your editor has, once again, had the opportunity to add to his collection of Ottawa Linux Symposium T-shirts. OLS2006 was a fun and interesting event, a testament to the increasing professionalism of its organizers, speakers, and attendees. And also, of course, to the energy and vitality which drives the Linux community.

Interesting things can be seen by looking at the the people who attend an event like this one. Not that long ago, the preferred attire was a shirt from a Linux event - the older, the better. While those shirts are still very much in evidence, shirts of the button-down variety are on the rise. Fortunately, there are still very few neckties to be seen (James Bottomley - next year's OLS keynote speaker - being the exception that proves the rule in this regard). There were also quite a few attendees who had clearly made the trip from Asia.

LinuxWorld may be the place to go to see what companies are doing, but OLS has clearly established itself as the event to attend to learn about what the development community - and the kernel development community in particular - is up to.

This year's schedule reveals some things about what the community is interested in. Virtualization remains a hot topic, but the emphasis has changed: Xen, the king of paravirtualization, was well represented, but was far from the whole story. Ian Pratt's Xen talk was held in one of the smaller rooms this year. The hotter topic appeared to be containers - lightweight virtualization which runs under the same kernel as the host. There is a lot of development activity around containers at the moment, and many of the people involved were at OLS to talk about it.

Last year's schedule featured exactly one filesystem talk - an update on ext3. This year, a quick scan shows no less than nine filesystem talks, plus a few on related topics (shared subtrees, for example). Expect to see some interesting development work in the filesystems area in the coming years.

[Greg KH] This year's keynote speaker was Greg Kroah-Hartman. Greg has posted the text of his talk along with the slides; it is such a clear representation of what was said that your editor sees no point in writing up a separate summary. The talk covered topics like hardware support (Linux is now second to none, says Greg), the illegal and unethical nature of closed source kernel modules, various aspects of the kernel development process, and more. The talk is very much worth a read.

For those who have not seen the article by Arjan van de Ven mentioned in Greg's talk: Arjan's doomsday scenario is also worth reading.

For the curious, the slides from LWN editor Jonathan Corbet's talk are available.

OLS has always been a kernel-oriented event, and the 2006 version was perhaps the most kernel-heavy yet. A look at the schedule shows almost no non-kernel talks - and most of the exceptions were concerned with the git and mercurial source control systems. The Desktop Developers' Conference was held immediately before OLS (at the same time as the Kernel Summit), but speakers from that conference did not speak at OLS. Their presence was very much felt, however, and there were some good conversations held between developers responsible for various levels of the full Linux system. Next year, however, it would be nice to hear more from the desktop people at OLS.

The fact that such a small complaint is the first that comes to mind speaks loudly. OLS remains a top-notch technical conference with interesting speakers, good organization (even the traditionally late final keynote almost started on time this year), great conversations, and a murderous closing party. The annual Ottawa pilgrimage remains an important event for many in the development community.

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The 2006 Ottawa Linux Symposium

Posted Jul 27, 2006 11:14 UTC (Thu) by smitty_one_each (subscriber, #28989) [Link]

<pedantic>
few neckties
</pedantic>
That was a bow tie, no?

The 2006 Ottawa Linux Symposium

Posted Jul 27, 2006 17:02 UTC (Thu) by lockhart (guest, #31615) [Link]

Note that this year's proceedings are available in PDF and source formats. They are located at ols2006.108.redhat.com.

Greg KH's keynote

Posted Jul 31, 2006 17:41 UTC (Mon) by wilck (guest, #29844) [Link]

I admire Greg KH for his excellent style, humour, and ability to assert things that everyone in the audience wants to believe.

Linux supports more devices, "out of the box", than any other OS ever has.

That's probably true, but it does not imply that Linux hardware support is a satisfying experience for users, and it doesn't disprove what Jeff Jaffe said. Just going into the next computer shop around the corner and buying an SATA RAID controller, USB webcam, sound card, modem, printer, TV card, Pocket PC... is almost certain to prove painfully that Linux is lacking support for a great deal of modern hardware, or just supports a small subset of the hardware's features. Especially if you do it without checking Linux compatibility beforehand (which is what most people do).

Go to any Linux Forum out there (except LWN, where the average reader writes an USB driver before breakfast) and you'll find loads of posts of desperate users trying to get there HW working, and just as many clueless replies.

Greg was realistic enough to add the side-note "out of the box" to his statement. Unfortunately, most people don't care whether a device is supported "out of the box" or with an add-on driver. And that leaves Linux far behind both Windows and MacOS in terms of device support.

Btw, I'd bet that Greg's USB printer was a HP or an Epson. Had he been an average buyer, he would might as well have bought a Canon - I doubt that his experience would have been as nice as he describes.

Linux supports more different processors than any other OS ever has.

True, and a truly great achievement. Unfortunately, it hardly matters to most users.

I hate to be the devil's advocate, but IMO Greg's assertions are overly optimistic and show a certain lack of interest in the problems and needs of average Linux users. We can't solve Linux' problems by claiming that they don't exist.


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