BSDCon 2000: Oct. 14-20 36
This is the second annual BSD Conference, after the success of the last one at Berkeley Marina. All BSD users are welcome, and encouraged to attend.
This year highlights will include:
- BSD Internals tutorial, by Kirk McKusick
- Conference dinner at the Monterey Aquarium
- Talks by BSD users, and members of the commercial community
It's all happening at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, and runs from Oct. 14 to Oct. 20. The first tutorial is on the 14-15th, Kirk's internals tutorial covers the 16-17th, and the rest of the conference is from the 18th to the 20th.
Naturally, these things cost money. It's $495 to attend the conference itself, and another $495 to attend a tutorial. (There are two tutorial sessions, one is on 14-15, the other is on 16-17. The second one is Kirk's BSD internals tutorial, the first one is TBA. Room rates at the Hyatt are $129 a night.
If you're a BSD user or developer and would like to present a paper at the conference then get writing. Contact Jim Mock with your ideas, or for more information about the topics they are looking for.
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:1)
One of the way to be sure that Linux's penquin head doesn't inflate the way Gate$' has is to keep and support viable competition.
BSDCon Prices (Score:1)
Who October? (Score:2)
Does no one do any research before scheduling these conferences?
Re:But they're the same anyway (Score:1)
Each operating system has their own niche market or group. Sure, FreeBSD may not support the latest and greatest hardware and software, but do all workstations and servers need that stuff? Probably not. Just to bring up something is that FreeBSD 3.3/3.4 had very good USB support and I was able to actually use several devices I couldn't get working under several distributions of Linux (even reading through the documents).
Do the most popular kids in high school always end up with the best job or a good image? Not always. I prefer BSD over Linux (not because of the BSD v. GPL thing) but rather I like to use it as a server operating system and to do basic word processing and e-mail. Since I already have the mirror'd files from the CD on my BSD machine, I just pop in the boot diskette and install it on my other machine in 15-20 minutes flat.
I could care less if I didn't have sound or DVD (that's what my TV and audio system is for). I don't play games so I don't need game support that Linux provides.
I didn't say that you hated nor liked either license, but I'm just saying that there are places where alternatives are good (like in licenses... I myself prefer the BSD license over the GPL license, but more on the purpose that it's more free for corporations and corporate developers).
Re:I'd love to, but wayyy too expensive. (Score:1)
Re:What are you complaining about? (Score:1)
Other than the fact that we are cool, many of us like BSD also. I don't see why any of you feel it is necessary to turn on the flames.
As for there being no apps, this type of attitude may be perpetuating this reality.
Long live BSD and Linux. Use which ever best fits your needs, I say.
MacOS X (Score:1)
Trolling for Scooby doo!
Re:Free Willy. (Score:1)
Well, Defcon is held yearly in Las Vegas. A couple hundred people come. They have speakers. It's $50.
Yep, I'd have to agree it's overpriced. I'd love to go to a BSDcon but not for that kind of money. If I'm going to spend that much dough, I'd rather go to a SANS conference where I get a bunch of hard copy literature with the lectures.
LiNT
Re:MacOS X (Score:1)
Why Monterey? (Score:1)
Re:price (Score:2)
Having a well organized conference makes it possible to invite important people (which usually is essential for delivering a good conference). Keeping the price high also prevents that there will be masses of newby hackers rather than really interested people.
mark this flamebait! (Score:1)
Re:price (Score:1)
The not-for-profit association I work for runs educational conferences around the world, once conference a year in each of five "areas."
Registration fees for our members for the NA Conference were $1,300 and for non-members were $1,450. Our break-even attendence was 350 attendees. That means that we needed 350 people to attend so that we didn't end up in the red. We made it for this conference. We don't always make it for every conference.
Conferences are *expensive* especially when non-for-profit organizations run them. You don't want to be taking money away from the bottom line - in this case, that would affect the money going into the BSD development efforts. The conference has to pay for itself.
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:1)
Re:Free Willy. (Score:2)
:) somebody has to pay for the free beer!
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:1)
If another company were to produce another viable alternative to the Transmete Crusoe chip, will you diss it because it's not linked with Linux or Linus?
I know many people have a religious hatred against the BSD license, but it's an alternative open source license. Sure the BSD license used to have the advertising clause and the ability for anyone to take and commercialize a product. But each license has their own goal and differences, allowing for additional choice and a better fit in different scenarios. Think if everything had to be GPL'd? It might not be as great as you think, since the lack of choice becomes an issue and undermines the point of open source.
If you hate BSD so much, just work with what you like and don't cause a flamewar or diss products with such open ignorance.
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:2)
Cons (Score:2)
The only people who are going to these things tend to be the ones who are already convinced that they are A Good Thing (tm). This is to say, you're not going to see a whole lot of Microsoft people at this one.
While that might sound like a good thing, it's not doing a lot for spreading alternative ideas. The Linux people go to Linux cons, the BSD people go to BSD cons, etc.
But then again, I suppose it's always been that way....
Re:Cons (Score:1)
That's probably not what you're looking to hear, but still, it's true.
I'd love to, but wayyy too expensive. (Score:1)
I also wish they'd try having it someplace else. I know, I know, it's Berkely, but every year?? Why did they even bother taking suggestions on their site if they were just going to stay in Berkeley again? I voted for New York or DC.
BSDcon fee: $500
1st tutorial fee: $500
2st tutorial fee: $500
Lodging for six nights at Regency: $780
Travel, and other expenses: $500
A week in California with a bunch of fellow BSD freaks: priceless...?
I'll bet I could knock at least $200 off the room by just staying at a cheaper hotel. But that's still over $2500 to get the full BSDcon experience.
$2500 could buy me several new PCs. It could almost buy me a G4 to run OSX (which I want to try out since it's BSD with a Mac UI). I already have the "Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD OS" book that the CSRG members wrote a few years ago. What more am I going to learn from him in those two days?
I'm sure it'll be a great time, but I, and many other BSD developers, just won't be able to go. Not everyone is a whorish contractor. Some of us have startups, and some of us are students, and some of us are in other countries. I'll bet if you lowered the prices, you'd make it up with increased attendance.
I'm not going to be unrealistic, but most anime cons are $50, max, for three days, and that's usually without sponsors, and at hotels as good as or better than the Regency. I'd really like to know why it can't be, say $200 for BSDcon. Trying to make BSD seem l337 by only letting rich people come to the con isn't helping anyone. (Oops, but yourselves!)
I'm going to have my own BSDcon. Anyone who wants to come to my house in DC during the *other* con in October, is welcome. I won't have any CSRG members, but we'll have good times, good caffeine, good brew, and a shitload of BSD systems. And it won't cost you $500.
prices and the little red devil (Score:1)
Biggy
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:1)
Would you recommend everyone working on KDE jump over to gnome, or everyone working on xml schema production system y to move over to xml schema production system t? How about we kill all distributions and conglomerate into one big mass, which will magically fulfill all goals and objectives that each team originally set out upon?
This comment is not worthy of moderation, because it is utter stupidity. This unthinking belief of hype and "world domination" is somewhat disturbing.
Re:Cons (Score:1)
A European YAPC (yapc::Europe [yapc.org]) is also being planned, but as it'll be in London accomodation will cost way more than the conference fees :-(
Feed me Seymour. (Score:1)
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:2)
No, there isn't. But people may want an alternative, even if they don't need one. By your logic, Coke and PepsiCo should combine forces to make the ultimate soft drink, and Ford and GM should join to work on perfecting the motor vehicle. Diversity is good. If people want to develop BSD, who are you to tell them they'd be better off putting their efforts into Linux? From a purely commercial point of view, if there was a single company controlling the direction of both BSD and Linux, it would make sense to merge the two. Thankfully, real life isn't like that.
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:3)
Now, I'm not saying Linux is anywhere near as bad as Windows, or even necessarily "bad" in any absolute sense, but I'd much rather work on BSD systems than on Linux, and no, I *can't* just "change Linux" to make it meet my needs.
You can't just mash philosophies together. SVR4 is a total disaster because it can't decide whether it's SysV or BSD. So, I can't take the Linux kernel design, add the design ideas I want, and expect to get a meaningful result.
You can't "merge" everything. Some things are sufficiently different that the best you can hope for is coexistance and compatability.
Yes, there's still a need for BSD. From a technical standpoint, there's probably still a need for more than one, just as there's a need for all the little branches and offshoots of Linux that crop up from time to time.
Re:It's $445 with early-bird discount (Score:1)
Re:MacOS X (Score:1)
It's no slouch. I managed to actually have a functional Darwin System on my Lombard G3. I built emacs and lynx under it fine...
Re:Free Willy. (Score:1)
also note that for the last two years, defcon was paid for by it's sister, black hat...a $1000 a head conference.
BSDCon is in a MUCH nicer hotel than Defcon, and includes such things as the dinner. Last year, they took a dinner cruise ship around the SF Bay, free of charge to attendee's. This year, the dinner is at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, again, free for attendee's. Not to mention the fact they give out goodie bags, serve 2 meals a day, and have a free beer bash.
sqweak
Re:What are you complaining about? (Score:1)
"What kind of music do you have here?"
"Oh, we have BOTH kinds! Country AND Western!"
I agree! Let's ditch BSD. (Score:1)
Well, ditch /proc, and then we can get into more details into how we are going to ditch all the other bad things in Linux until it looks exactly like BSD. I just don't know why go to such trouble to get a BSD called "Linux", but...
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:2)
Why California? (Score:1)
Boo to Slashdot. (Score:1)
My vote is for Richard Harney
Re:Is there a need for BSD? (Score:1)
It's $445 with early-bird discount (Score:2)
The cost of the conference is $495. If you register before September 1, 2000, you qualify for the early-bird discount of $50 off.
Still, $495 is not expensive for a high-tech conference of any sort. If you look at some of the seminars and developer conferences held by Seimens, Microsoft, Oracle or any other companies, the BSDCon is pretty inexpensive. It is pretty expensive to hold a 3-4 day conference in California for hundreds of people. Conferences aren't really BSDi's main source of income (it's the CD's and BSDI's products/services).