MUUG Monthly Meetings for 2006-07
Please note our meeting location:
The IBM offices, at
400 Ellice Ave.
(between Edmonton and Kennedy).
When you arrive, you will have to sign in at the reception desk,
and then wait for someone to take you (in groups) to the meeting room.
Please try to arrive by about 7:15pm, so the meeting can start promptly
at 7:30pm. Don't be late, or you may not get in.
(But don't come too early either, since security may not
be there to let you in before 7:15 or so.)
Non-members are welcome, but may be required to show photo ID at the security desk.
Limited parking is available for free on the street,
either on Ellice Ave. or on some of the intersecting streets.
Indoor parking is also available nearby, at Portage Place,
for $3.00 for the evening.
Bicycle parking is available in a bike rack under video surveillance
located behind the building on Webb Place.
A few months ago, Gilbert Detillieux, a die-hard UNIX user since around 1980,
did the unthinkable:
he switched to using a Windows-based system as his primary desktop at work!
Has he lost his mind?
Or were there mitigating factors that affected his decision?
How can a UNIX user survive in a Windows environment?
Are there tools available that can ease the pain,
and allow one to work effectively in a heterogeneous environment,
without going through UNIX withdrawal?
In this presentation, Gilbert explained how he did it.
This was a fairly informal, interactive presentation,
that lead to some lively discussion
on alternative desktop solutions, and the pros and cons of each.
Gilbert's presentation slides are available online, in
PowerPoint source and
PDF formats.
Gilbert has also provided a set of
bookmarks
(which you can save to a local file and import into Firefox)
to the various open source and freeware utilities mentioned in his talk,
as well as the various extensions for Mozilla Firefox and Thunderbird.
October 10, 2006: PKI: Public Key Infrastructure - What it can do for you
This month, Adam Thompson gave us an introduction to
public-key infrastructure.
PKI is the technology that enables secure web browsing (SSL)
and secure e-mail (S/MIME) - you might know what an SSL Certificate is,
but did you know you can enable single-sign-on by running your own PKI?
That you don't have to pay for expensive SSL certificates?
That you can use PKI to secure password-less SSH authentication?
The discussion covered uses of SSL certificates,
and a high-level overview of the
OpenSSL and
OpenCA toolkits.
There was also a brief mention of the new, free
CAcert service.
Adam's presentation slides are available online, in
PowerPoint source and
PDF formats.
"The platform for your Open Enterprise needs."
That's how Novell describes
SUSE Linux 10.
Since it's purchase of SUSE, Novell has been positioning SUSE Linux
as the one product line that will work from the desktop
to the enterprise server.
With this goal in mind, Novell has taken steps to provide greater power
and security as well as to increase the "user friendliness" of SUSE Linux.
In this presentation by Wayne Billing, of the University of Manitoba,
we saw a brief overview of some of the things (AutoYAST, 3D desktop,
AppArmor, XEN) that Novell is counting on to make SUSE Linux
a viable choice for enterprise desktops and servers.
As the year wound down, it was time for MUUG to take things at a more relaxed
pace. So, we let the round-table discussion go a bit longer
(rather than cutting it short as we sometimes have to), then instead of
a very short coffee break, we had a more laid-back mingler with some
holiday treats and more time for informal discussion.
Although the fat guy in red didn't show up, there were some gifts given out:
A better-than-average selection of door prizes were up for grabs to those who
held the winning tickets, whether they'd been naughty or nice this year.
January 9, 2007: IBM Server Virtualization with VMware ESX
Scott Jordan, IBM's Technical Support for the Prairies System x Sales Team,
talked about IBM blade server technology, and demoed VMware ESX.
Larger disk arrays, faster processors, and more dense memory packaging
are making virtualization a very attractive solution for running multiple
operating systems on one hardware platform.
Add to this the centralized management,
redundancy, and high availability features of VMware
and you have a powerful business solution.
Scott brought his pet "rack" along and put it through its paces.
Kevin McGregor had a common problem:
He could generate lots of interesting system logging data
and direct it to a common logging system to be recorded,
but he wanted to perform more sophisticated analysis
than could be done with text files and grep.
Also, managing log rotations and old data was a concern,
as was automatic report generation for management.
This month, Kevin explained how he put together
the combination of syslog-ng and PostgreSQL to solve this problem.
Kevin's presentation slides are available online, in
PowerPoint source and
PDF formats.
March 13, 2007: Sun's Zettabyte File System
Shawn Wallbridge presented on ZFS,
a new filesystem that was introduced with Solaris 10 update 2.
Some have called it the most advanced file system ever;
it certainly has a lot of very advanced features.
Shawn discussed ZFS, its features and benefits,
and how it has changed how Frantic Films looks at storage.
The presentation also featured a live demo, using OpenSolaris running
under Parallels on a Mac OS X system.
Shawn's presentation slides are available online, in
PDF format.
April 10, 2007: Things you can do with 'Embedded' Devices
The Linksys WRT54G is probably one of the most
popular consumer routers around, but for unlikely
reasons. Linksys had decided to use Linux as the
operating system inside. Linux and hardware hackers
around the world started poking around inside.
Shawn Wallbridge talked about various
embedded devices that can be used in interesting
ways, for both good and evil.
May 8, 2007: Gordon Meyer's Smart Home Hacks
Attendees learned how to put their computer to work around the house.
Gordon's presentation was meant to get people started with the basics of
do-it-yourself home automation, covering the most practical, fun,
and interesting techniques culled from around the globe.
Drawn from the best of
Smart Home Hacks,
the talk contained advice to get novices on the fast track to the most
useful methods, and lots of tips, inspiration, and lively discussion
to keep even the pros interested.
Gordon Meyer is a Chicago-based writer and speaker
who has authored dozens of software manuals,
numerous articles for computer users and technical writers,
and O'Reilly's
Smart Home Hacks,
a leading book on do-it-yourself home automation techniques.
Gordon, an amateur magician and a frequent speaker at technical conferences,
touts a practical, lighthearted,
and humanized approach to integrating technology with daily life.
Gordon has provided links to useful home automation resources through
his web site.
For this special meeting, a larger-than-usual venue was chosen, which allowed
room for many non-members to attend as well.
MUUG member Brock Wolfe, a home-automation veteran himself,
also provided lots of useful tips, both at the meeting and later via
this posting.
LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP/Perl) applications are popular for many reasons.
As a site grows, some work has to go into maintaining the various components of
the architecture so that bottlenecks are eliminated.
This presentation by
Sean Walberg
went over many of the things to look for
in the LAMP components of high volume websites, based on his experiences with
b5media.com.
Sean's presentation slides are available online, in
PDF format.
John Lange
provided some useful follow-up tips on MySQL tuning, via
this posting
to the "roundtable" mailing list.
July 2007: No meeting this month
August 2007: No meeting this month
Please note our meeting location:
The IBM offices, at
400 Ellice Ave.
(between Edmonton and Kennedy).
When you arrive, you will have to sign in at the reception desk,
and then wait for someone to take you (in groups) to the meeting room.
Please try to arrive by about 7:15pm, so the meeting can start promptly
at 7:30pm. Don't be late, or you may not get in.
(But don't come too early either, since security may not
be there to let you in before 7:15 or so.)
Non-members are welcome, but may be required to show photo ID at the security desk.
Limited parking is available for free on the street,
either on Ellice Ave. or on some of the intersecting streets.
Indoor parking is also available nearby, at Portage Place,
for $3.00 for the evening.
Bicycle parking is available in a bike rack under video surveillance
located behind the building on Webb Place.