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Issue #9 July 2005
In many ways, Karlsruhe, Germany is the perfect town to host an open source event. It's a university town, home to the oldest technical university in Germany. Heinrich Hertz discovered electromagnetic waves in Karlsruhe in the 1880s. Karlsruhe was the location of the first internet backbone connection in Germany. The forerunner to the bicycle was also invented here, a fact commemorated by the recent visit of this year's Tour de France. Karlsruhe clearly has a history of attracting innovators.
Since 2002, Karlsruhe has also been the host city of LinuxTag, one of the largest annual gatherings of the open source community in the world. LinuxTag celebrated its tenth anniversary at this year's event, and organizers estimated attendance at more than 16,000 people. A number of exciting announcements were made, most notably the release of Knoppix 4.0 and the new relationship between Wikipedia and the KDE project.
The Fedora Project was proud to be a participant and sponsor of this year's event, holding the second Fedora Users and Developers Conference (FUDCon) at the Kongresszentrum. Following on the success of the first FUDCon in Boston this February, the turnout for the sessions at FUDCon 2 was impressive; some of the sessions were crowded enough that organizers were forced to turn people away.
Among the highlights of the sessions at FUDCon 2:
The strong technical focus of the presentations drew a knowledgeable crowd. "What set this show apart from similar shows I've worked in the USA was the technical calibre of attendees," Mark Cox said. "They didn't come up to ask for a free hat. They came to grill us on our choice of SELinux targeted policy daemons and the internal workings of ExecShield."
Over a dozen sessions took place over the two days of FUDCon; the (mostly) complete list of sessions and presentation materials can be found at fedoraproject.org.