Amrisha Prashar
on 1 May 2015
Next week, from the 5th to 7th of May, another edition of the Ubuntu Online Summit is taking off. Three days of sessions for developers, designers, advocates, users and all members of our diverse community.
Along the developer-oriented discussions you’ll find presentations, workshops, lightning talks and much more. It’s a great opportunity for existing and new members to get together and contribute to the talks, watch a workshop to learn something new, or ask your questions to many of the rockstars who make Ubuntu.
Here’s an overview (and preview) of the content that you should expect in each one of the tracks:
- App & scope development: the SDK and developer platform roadmaps, phone core apps planning, developer workshops
- Cloud: Ubuntu Core on clouds, Juju, Cloud DevOps discussions, charm tutorials, the Charm, OpenStack
- Community: governance discussions, community event planning, Q+As, how to get involved in Ubuntu
- Convergence: the road to convergence, the Ubuntu desktop roadmap, requirements and use cases to bring the desktop and phone together
- Core: snappy Ubuntu Core, snappy post-vivid plans, snappy demos and Q+As
- Show & Tell: presentations, demos, lightning talks (read: things that break and explode) on a varied range of topics
Joining the summit is easy, you’ll just need to follow the instructions and register for free to the Ubuntu Online Summit;
Ubuntu Online Summit highlights
Mark’s pre-UOS keynote
As an extra treat, and warming up the engines one day before the Summit starts, on Monday the 4th at 14:00UTC Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu, will host a keynote followed by an open Q+A session at the Ubuntu On Air channel. An exciting opportunity to learn and ask about the future of Ubuntu, do mark it on your calendars!
Ask Jane Q+A session
In the same spirit of openness that defines Ubuntu, Jane Silber, Canonical CEO Jane Silber will be taking to the airwaves to answer all of the questions from community members about Ubuntu, Canonical, Open Source and more. Join the session on Wednesday the 6th at 17:00UTC
Back to the desktop, snappy and the road to convergence
This is going to be perhaps one of the most important summits in recent times. After a successful launch of the phone, followed by the exciting announcement and delivery of snappy Ubuntu Core, Ubuntu is entering a new era. An era of lean, secure, minimal and modular systems that can run on the cloud, on Internet-enabled devices, on the desktop and virtually anywhere.
While the focus on development in the last few cycles has been on shaping up and implementing the phone, this doesn’t mean other key parts of the project have been left out. The phone has helped create the platform and tools that will ultimately bring all these projects together, into a converged code base and user experience. From desktop to phone, to the cloud, to things, and back to the desktop.
The Ubuntu 15.10 cycle begins, and so does this exciting new era. The Ubuntu Online Summit will be a unique opportunity to pave the road to convergence and discuss how the next generation of the Ubuntu desktop is built. So the desktop is back on the spotlight, and snappy will be taking the lead role in bringing Ubuntu for devices and desktop together. Expect a week of interesting discussions and of thinking out of the box to get there!
Participating in the Ubuntu Online Summit
Does this whet your appetite? Come and join us at the Summit, learn more and contribute to shaping the future of Ubuntu! There are different ways of taking part in the online event via video hangouts:
Participate or watch sessions – everyone is welcome to participate and join a discussion to provide input or offer contribution. If you prefer to take a rear seat, that’s fine too. You can either subscribe to sessions, watch them on your browser or directly join a live hangout. Just remember to register first and learn how to join a session.
Propose a session – do you want to take a more active role in contributing to Ubuntu? Do you have a topic you’d like to discuss, or an idea you’d like to implement? Then you’ll probably want to propose a session to make it happen. There is still a week for accepting proposals, so why don’t you go ahead and propose a session?
Looking forward to seeing you all at the Summit!