REMINDER: Python proposals due February 13th for OSCON / Python 13

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  • Kevin Altis

    REMINDER: Python proposals due February 13th for OSCON / Python 13

    Please submit your tutorial and session proposals for the Python track by
    February 13th. The information and relevant URLs are below.

    ka
    ---



    The Call for Proposals has just opened for the
    7th Annual O'Reilly Open Source Convention


    OSCON is headed back to friendly, economical Portland, Oregon during the
    week of August 1-5, 2005. If you've ever wanted to join the OSCON
    speaker
    firmament, now's your chance to submit a proposal (or two) by February
    13,
    2005.

    Complete details are available on the OSCON web site, but we're
    particularly interested in exploring how software development is moving
    to
    another level, and how developers and businesses are adjusting to new
    business models and architectures. We're looking for sessions,
    tutorials,
    and workshops proposals that appeal to developers, systems and network
    administrators, and their managers in the following areas:

    - All aspects of building applications, services, and systems that use
    the
    new capabilities of the open source platform
    - Burning issues for Java, Mozilla, web apps, and beyond
    - The commoditization of software: who and/or what can show us the
    money?
    - Network-enabled collaboration
    - Software customizability , including software as a service
    - Law, licensing, politics, and how best to navigate other troubled
    waters

    Specific topics and tracks at OSCON 2005 include: Linux and other open
    source operating systems, Java, PHP, Python, Perl, Databases (including
    MySQL and PostgreSQL), Apache, XML, Applications, Ruby, and Security.

    Attendees have a wide range of experience, so be sure to target a
    particular level of experience: beginner, intermediate, advanced. Talks
    and tutorials should be technical; strictly no marketing presentations.
    Session presentations are 45 or 90 minutes long, and tutorials are
    either
    a half-day (3 hours) or a full day (6 hours).

    Feel free to spread the word about the Call for Proposals to your
    friends,
    family, colleagues, and compatriots. We want everyone to submit, from
    American women hacking artificial life into the Linux kernel to Belgian
    men building a better mousetrap from PHP and recycled military hardware.
    We mean everyone!

    Even if you don't want to participate as a speaker, send us your
    suggestions--topics you'd like to see covered, groups we should bring
    into
    the OSCON fold, extra-curricular activities we should organize--to
    oscon-idea@oreilly.co m .

    This year, we're moving to the wide open spaces of the Oregon Convention
    Center. We've arranged for the nearby Doubletree Hotel to be our
    headquarters hotel--it's a short, free Max light rail ride (or a lovely
    walk) from the Convention Center.

    Registration opens in April 2005; hotel information will be available
    shortly.

    Deadline to submit a proposal is Midnight (PST), February 13.

    For all the conference details, go to:


    Press coverage, blogs, photos, and news from the 2004 O'Reilly Open
    Source
    Convention can be found at: http://www.oreillynet.com/oscon2004/

    Would your company like to make a big impression on the open source
    community? If so, consider exhibiting or becoming a sponsor. Contact
    Andrew Calvo at (707) 827-7176, or andrewc@oreilly .com for more info.

    See you Portland next summer,

    The O'Reilly OSCON Team


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