[Wolves] Lightning Talks

Adam Sweet adamsweet at gmail.com
Fri Jun 5 17:25:50 UTC 2020


Thanks Chris, I'd be interested all of those. The bottom 5 particularly,
and the first two later on. I've seen your Bergamot talk twice, but you
can do it for those that haven't.

FWIW, I've put all this stuff up here:

http://wolveslug.org.uk/proposed-talks/

I'll keep this list updated as people offer subjects they can talk on
and request some they'd be interested in and we can pick them off over time.

Ad


On 05/06/2020 16:50, Chris Ellis via Wolves wrote:
> This is a great idea, and I'd really encourage everyone to try and do
> a short talk.  No matter how nervous you might feel about it, people
> won't bite.
> If you think you can't talk about anything that would interest others,
> I'm fairly certain you will be able too, as they say, there is a book
> in everyone.
> 
> Things I'm happy to talk on:
> * Ceph - Software Defined Storage - Quick overview and some of the
> pain I went through with it
> * Routed Network Fabrics - How to build really high throughput
> networks dirt cheap using commodity switches and Linux cleverness
> * Bergamot Monitoring - Need I say more
> * ESP32 - What is it and getting started.
> * Containers - Happy to do an intro to Docker / Containers / Podman,
> how to run stuff and how to build containers.
> * Kubernetes - What is it and getting started
> * openSUSE - A quick look at MicroOS and Kubic - new variants of
> openSUSE which are pretty interesting
> * Anything PostgreSQL related
> 
> Happy to listen to anything other people want to talk about,
> especially things that they find interesting and are passionate about.
> 
> Chris E.
> On Fri, Jun 5, 2020 at 4:18 PM Adam Sweet via Wolves
> <wolves at mailman.lug.org.uk> wrote:
>>
>> So, here are some things I could talk about:
>>
>> * The command line for beginners
>> * Network monitoring with Nagios
>> * SNMP and how to monitor your network with it
>> * Diet and exercise for geeks
>> * Taking care of your back when you sit down all day
>> * How to grow chillies (and other vegetables)
>> * Setting up a website with Linux
>> * Network file sharing with Linux (NFS, Samba and SSH)
>> * Guitar basics
>> * The basics of cooking good food well
>> * Introduction to OpenBSD
>> * The FreeBSD and OpenBSD pf firewall
>>
>> Some things I'd like to hear others talk about:
>>
>> * Containers (LXC, Docker, podman etc)
>> * Kubernetes, what and why
>> * ESP32 (firmware, language runtimes and power saving)
>> * HomeAssistant
>> * Python programming, maybe C, C++ and Java too
>> * Introductions to other distros e.g. (Open)SUSE, Elementary OS
>> * Basics of electronics
>>
>> So, go ahead. Feel free to post a list of things you could demo or talk
>> about and let me know which of the above you'd like to hear about.
>>
>> Only rule here is you should offer more than you request...
>>
>> Ad
>>
>>
>>
>> On 05/06/2020 15:37, Adam Sweet wrote:
>>> On Weds we discussed the idea of holding regular lightning talk
>>> evenings, perhaps once a fortnight or once a month as a prelude to
>>> holding longer format talks in future.
>>>
>>> By lightning talks we mean 5-15 minute introductions to a topic that you
>>> know something about and can explain to others. Ideally, that would be
>>> something geeky or to do with technology but it doesn't have to be, it
>>> could be some other area you know about like music, cooking or gardening
>>> since we're a diverse group and have lots of interests. Perhaps
>>> something along the lines of:
>>>
>>> * Your preferred Linux distro
>>> * A particular software application that you know that others might be
>>> interested in
>>> * What you do in your line of work (sysadmin or dev tools, the language
>>> or IDE you use, what technologies you use)
>>> * Hardware (PC, server, embedded, Arduino, ESP32/ESP8266, radio)
>>> * Radio stuff
>>> * A particular musical instrument you play and how to get started
>>> * Gardening or some other hobby you might have
>>>
>>> Obviously, being a 5-15 min talk it doesn't need to be a deep dive, just
>>> an intro and answering some questions.
>>>
>>> We're an interesting bunch and we have a lot of expertise in different
>>> areas of technology and a lot of interests outside of technology so I'm
>>> sure each of us can come up with something.
>>>
>>> So, for this coming Wednesday's virtual meeting, I'd like everyone to
>>> think of something they could talk about for 5-15 mins on and we'll
>>> choose enough to fill maybe an hour.
>>>
>>> Don't be worried about talking about stuff you think everyone will
>>> already know, or won't want to know, or getting something wrong, or
>>> being heckled, we're all in the same boat and most of us have known each
>>> other a long time.
>>>
>>> I think we'd all like more LUG content, talks and presentations in
>>> particular, but nobody actually wants to give them, so we all have to be
>>> prepared to contribute and this is a low barrier to entry.
>>>
>>> So, that's the price of admission for the next virtual meeting. If you
>>> want to join the conf, then be prepared to talk about something. Do a
>>> bit of prep so you know what you're going to say, maybe prepare some
>>> slides or do a screen share to show stuff. If we have more than an
>>> hour's worth, then maybe you won't have to do yours until the next time,
>>> but at least you'll have to volunteered and we'll have something in the
>>> bank for next time.
>>>
>>> I'm going to post a follow-up containing a list of things I could talk
>>> about and a list of things I'd like to hear others talk about.
>>>
>>> Ad
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
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>> Homepage: http://www.wolveslug.org.uk/
>> Mailing list: Wolves at mailman.lug.org.uk
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> 




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