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Lines 10-3076 Link Here
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	<!-- Source: bsdtalk
10
	<!-- Source: bsdtalk
11
	-->
11
	-->
12
12
13
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070510">
13
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080520">
14
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Diane Bruce</title>
14
	    <title>Alex Feldman from Sangoma</title>
15
	    <desc><![CDATA[
15
	    <desc>
16
		Interview with FreeBSD developer Diane Bruce. We
16
		Interview at BSDCan2008 with Alex Feldman from Sangoma.
17
		talk about Ham Radio on BSD.
17
	    </desc>
18
		Slides from one of her talks:
18
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/05/bsdtalk150-alex-feldman-from-sangoma.html</overview>
19
		<a href="http://www.oarc.net/hamradio_on_freebsd.pdf">http://www.oarc.net/hamradio_on_freebsd.pdf</a>
19
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,sangoma,alex feldman</tags>
20
21
	    ]]></desc>
22
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk111-freebsd-developer-diane.html</overview>
23
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,diana bruce</tags>
24
	    <files>
20
	    <files>
25
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
21
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
26
		<file>
22
		<file>
27
		    <url>bsdtalk111.mp3</url>
23
		    <url>bsdtalk150.mp3</url>
28
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
24
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
29
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
25
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
30
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
26
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
31
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
27
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
32
		</file>
28
		</file>
33
		<file>
29
		<file>
34
		    <url>bsdtalk111.ogg</url>
30
		    <url>bsdtalk150.ogg</url>
35
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
31
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
36
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
32
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
37
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
33
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
38
		</file>
34
		</file>
39
	    </files>
35
	    </files>
40
	</item>
36
	</item>
41
37
42
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070503">
38
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080518">
43
	    <title>Josh Berkus, Postgresql Lead at Sun Microsystems</title>
39
	    <title>Justin Gibbs from the FreeBSD Foundation</title>
44
	    <desc>
40
	    <desc>
45
		Interview with Josh Berkus, Postgresql Lead at Sun
41
		Interview with Justin Gibbs from the FreeBSD Foundation.
46
		Microsystems. We talk about the upcoming PGCon on
47
		23-24 May 2007. More info at http://www.pgcon.org.
48
	    </desc>
42
	    </desc>
49
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk110-josh-berkus-postgresql-lead.html</overview>
43
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/05/bsdtalk149-justin-gibbs-from-freebsd.html</overview>
50
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,postgresql,josh berkus</tags>
44
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd foundation,justin gibbs</tags>
51
	    <files>
45
	    <files>
52
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
46
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
53
		<file>
47
		<file>
54
		    <url>bsdtalk110.mp3</url>
48
		    <url>bsdtalk149.mp3</url>
55
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
49
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
56
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
50
		    <length>11 minutes</length>
57
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
51
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
58
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
52
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
59
		</file>
53
		</file>
60
		<file>
54
		<file>
61
		    <url>bsdtalk110.ogg</url>
55
		    <url>bsdtalk149.ogg</url>
62
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
56
		    <length>11 minutes</length>
63
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
57
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
64
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
58
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
65
		</file>
59
		</file>
66
	    </files>
60
	    </files>
67
	</item>
61
	</item>
68
62
69
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070426">
63
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080503">
70
	    <title>George Neville-Neil and Using VMs for Development</title>
64
	    <title>Jeremy White, Founder of CodeWeavers</title>
71
	    <desc>
65
	    <desc>
72
		George Neville-Neil and Using VMs for Development.
66
		Interview with Jeremy White, Founder of CodeWeavers.
73
		See http://blogs.freebsdish.org/gnn for more
67
		We talk about the recent availability of an
74
		information.
68
		experimental build of Crossover Games for BSD.
75
	    </desc>
69
	    </desc>
76
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk109-george-neville-neil-and.html</overview>
70
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/05/bsdtalk148-jeremy-white-founder-of.html</overview>
77
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,virtual machines,george neville-neil</tags>
71
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,codeweavers,crossover,jeremy white</tags>
78
	    <files>
72
	    <files>
79
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
73
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
80
		<file>
74
		<file>
81
		    <url>bsdtalk109.mp3</url>
75
		    <url>bsdtalk148.mp3</url>
82
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
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		    <size>7 Mb</size>
83
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
77
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
84
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
78
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
85
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
79
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
86
		</file>
80
		</file>
87
		<file>
81
		<file>
88
		    <url>bsdtalk109.ogg</url>
82
		    <url>bsdtalk148.ogg</url>
89
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
83
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
90
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
84
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
91
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
85
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
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		</file>
86
		</file>
93
	    </files>
87
	    </files>
94
	</item>
88
	</item>
95
89
96
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070419">
90
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080418">
97
	    <title>Matt Juszczak from bsdjobs.net</title>
91
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Alexander Motin</title>
98
	    <desc>
92
	    <desc>
99
		Interview with Matt Juszczak from bsdjobs.net.
93
		Interview with FreeBSD Developer Alexander Motin.
94
		We talk about mpd, the netgraph based Multi-link
95
		PPP Daemon. For more information, see
96
		http://mpd.sourceforge.net/.
100
	    </desc>
97
	    </desc>
101
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk108-matt-juszczak-from.html</overview>
98
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/04/bsdtalk147-freebsd-developer-alexander.html</overview>
102
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bsdjobs,matt juszczak</tags>
99
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,mpd,alexander motin</tags>
103
	    <files>
100
	    <files>
104
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
101
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
105
		<file>
102
		<file>
106
		    <url>bsdtalk108.mp3</url>
103
		    <url>bsdtalk147.mp3</url>
107
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
104
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
108
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
105
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
109
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
106
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
110
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
107
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
111
		</file>
108
		</file>
112
		<file>
109
		<file>
113
		    <url>bsdtalk108.ogg</url>
110
		    <url>bsdtalk147.ogg</url>
114
		    <length>4 minutes</length>
111
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
115
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
112
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
116
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
113
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
117
		</file>
114
		</file>
118
	    </files>
115
	    </files>
119
	</item>
116
	</item>
120
117
121
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070412">
118
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080408">
122
	    <title>Contiki OS Developer Adam Dunkels</title>
119
	    <title>James Cornell</title>
123
	    <desc>
120
	    <desc>
124
		Interview with Contiki OS Developer Adam Dunkels. You can find more information at http://www.sics.se/contiki/.
121
		Another interview with Sysadmin James Cornell. We
122
		talk about BSD, OpenSolaris, and Linux on the
123
		desktop.
125
	    </desc>
124
	    </desc>
126
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk107-contiki-os-developer-adam.html</overview>
125
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/04/bsdtalkalk146-james-cornell.html</overview>
127
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,contikios,adam dunkels</tags>
126
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,desktop,james cornell</tags>
128
	    <files>
127
	    <files>
129
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
128
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
130
		<file>
129
		<file>
131
		    <url>bsdtalk107.mp3</url>
130
		    <url>bsdtalk146.mp3</url>
132
		    <size>13 Mb</size>
131
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
133
		    <length>27 minutes</length>
132
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
134
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
133
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
135
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
134
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
136
		</file>
135
		</file>
137
		<file>
136
		<file>
138
		    <url>bsdtalk107.ogg</url>
137
		    <url>bsdtalk146.ogg</url>
139
		    <length>27 minutes</length>
138
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
140
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
139
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
141
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
140
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
142
		</file>
141
		</file>
143
	    </files>
142
	    </files>
144
	</item>
143
	</item>
145
144
146
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070409">
145
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080402">
147
	    <title>Interview with Matthieu Herrb about Xenocara</title>
146
	    <title>Adam Wright from No Starch Press</title>
148
	    <desc>
147
	    <desc><![CDATA[
149
		Interview with Matthieu Herrb about Xenocara.
148
		<p>
150
	    </desc>
149
		Intro: Some musings on the consistency and simplicity of BSD.
151
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk106-interview-with-matthieu.html</overview>
150
		</p><p>
152
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,xenocara,matthieu herrb</tags>
151
		A brief interview with Adam Wright from No Starch
152
		Press, recorded by Micheal Dexter on behalf of
153
		BSDTalk. They talk about recent and future BSD
154
		books.
155
		</p>
156
	    ]]></desc>
157
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/04/bsdtalk145-adam-wright-from-no-starch.html</overview>
158
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,books,no starch press,adam wright</tags>
153
	    <files>
159
	    <files>
154
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
160
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
155
		<file>
161
		<file>
156
		    <url>bsdtalk106.mp3</url>
162
		    <url>bsdtalk145.mp3</url>
157
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
163
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
158
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
164
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
159
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
165
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
160
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
166
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
161
		</file>
167
		</file>
162
		<file>
168
		<file>
163
		    <url>bsdtalk106.ogg</url>
169
		    <url>bsdtalk145.ogg</url>
164
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
170
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
165
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
171
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
166
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
172
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
167
		</file>
173
		</file>
168
	    </files>
174
	    </files>
169
	</item>
175
	</item>
170
176
171
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070401">
177
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080322">
172
	    <title>Intro to PF with Jason Dixon</title>
178
	    <title>Dan Langille</title>
173
	    <desc>
179
	    <desc>
174
		Introduction to PF with Jason Dixon.
180
		Interview with Dan Langille. We talk about his new
181
		job with Afilias, and BSDCan 2008.
175
	    </desc>
182
	    </desc>
176
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk105-intro-to-pf-with-jason-dixon.html</overview>
183
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/03/bsdtalk144-dan-langille.html</overview>
177
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pf,jason dixon</tags>
184
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,afilias,bsdcan2008,dan langille</tags>
178
	    <files>
185
	    <files>
179
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
186
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
180
		<file>
187
		<file>
181
		    <url>bsdtalk105.mp3</url>
188
		    <url>bsdtalk144.mp3</url>
182
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
189
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
183
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
190
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
184
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
191
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
185
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
192
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
186
		</file>
193
		</file>
187
		<file>
194
		<file>
188
		    <url>bsdtalk105.ogg</url>
195
		    <url>bsdtalk144.ogg</url>
189
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
196
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
190
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
197
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
191
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
198
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
192
		</file>
199
		</file>
193
	    </files>
200
	    </files>
194
	</item>
201
	</item>
195
202
196
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070321">
203
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080311">
197
	    <title>Getting to know X</title>
204
	    <title>BSD Hobbiest Deborah Norling</title>
198
	    <desc><![CDATA[
205
	    <desc>
199
		<p>
206
		Interview with Deborah Norling. We talk about her
200
		Getting to know the X Window System.<br>
207
		use of BSD on old hardware, accessibility on the
201
		Make sure you are in a text only mode. You might
208
		BSDs, and Simh (http://simh.trailing-edge.com).
202
		need to change how the system boots, or boot into
203
		single user mode.
204
		</p>
205
		<ul>
206
		<li>"startx" to make sure X is working right.
207
		<li>"X" by itself gives the basic grey screen.
208
		<li>"ctrl" and "alt" and "backspace" keys at the same time will zap X.
209
		<li>"X & xterm -display :0"
210
		<li>"xterm -geometry +300+300"
211
		<li>"twm" or "metacity"
212
		</ul>
213
		]]>
214
	    </desc>
209
	    </desc>
215
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk104-getting-to-know-x.html</overview>
210
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/03/bsdtalk143-bsd-hobbiest-deborah-norling.html</overview>
216
	    <tags>bsdtalk,X</tags>
211
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,accessibility,deborah norling</tags>
217
	    <files>
212
	    <files>
218
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
213
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
219
		<file>
214
		<file>
220
		    <url>bsdtalk104.mp3</url>
215
		    <url>bsdtalk143.mp3</url>
221
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
216
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
222
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
217
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
223
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
218
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
224
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
219
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
225
		</file>
220
		</file>
226
		<file>
221
		<file>
227
		    <url>bsdtalk104.ogg</url>
222
		    <url>bsdtalk143.ogg</url>
228
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
223
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
229
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
224
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
230
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
225
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
231
		</file>
226
		</file>
232
	    </files>
227
	    </files>
233
	</item>
228
	</item>
234
229
235
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070313">
230
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080301">
236
	    <title>Robert Ricci from Emulab</title>
231
	    <title>FreeBSD Lead Release Engineer Ken Smith</title>
237
	    <desc>
232
	    <desc>
238
		Interview with Robert Ricci from www.Emulab.net.
233
		Interview with FreeBSD Lead Release Engineer Ken Smith.
239
	    </desc>
234
	    </desc>
240
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk103-robert-ricci-from-emulab.html</overview>
235
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/02/bsdtalk142-freebsd-lead-release.html</overview>
241
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,emulab,robert ricci</tags>
236
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,release engineer,ken smith</tags>
242
	    <files>
237
	    <files>
243
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
238
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
244
		<file>
239
		<file>
245
		    <url>bsdtalk103.mp3</url>
240
		    <url>bsdtalk142.mp3</url>
246
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
241
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
247
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
242
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
248
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
243
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
249
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
244
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
250
		</file>
245
		</file>
251
		<file>
246
		<file>
252
		    <url>bsdtalk103.ogg</url>
247
		    <url>bsdtalk142.ogg</url>
253
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
248
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
254
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
249
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
255
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
250
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
256
		</file>
251
		</file>
257
	    </files>
252
	    </files>
258
	</item>
253
	</item>
259
254
260
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070308">
255
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080227">
261
	    <title>Cisco Distinguished Engineer Randall Stewart</title>
256
	    <title>PBI 4 with Kris Moore</title>
262
	    <desc>
257
	    <desc>
263
		Interview with Cisco Distinguished Engineer Randall
258
		Interview with PC-BSD founder Kris Moore about the
264
		Stewart. We talk about the Stream Control Transmission
259
		new features in PBI 4.
265
		Protocol and his work bringing it to FreeBSD.
266
	    </desc>
260
	    </desc>
267
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk102-cisco-distinguished-engineer.html</overview>
261
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/02/bsdtalk141-pbi4-with-kris-moore.html</overview>
268
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,cisco,freebsd,stream control transmission protocol,randall stewart</tags>
262
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pc-bsd, kris moore</tags>
269
	    <files>
263
	    <files>
270
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
264
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
271
		<file>
265
		<file>
272
		    <url>bsdtalk102.mp3</url>
266
		    <url>bsdtalk141.mp3</url>
273
		    <size>17 Mb</size>
267
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
274
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
268
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
275
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
269
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
276
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
270
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
277
		</file>
271
		</file>
278
		<file>
272
		<file>
279
		    <url>bsdtalk102.ogg</url>
273
		    <url>bsdtalk141.ogg</url>
280
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
274
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
281
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
275
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
282
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
276
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
283
		</file>
277
		</file>
284
	    </files>
278
	    </files>
285
	</item>
279
	</item>
286
280
287
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070227">
281
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080206">
288
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer George Neville-Neil</title>
282
	    <title>The Mult Project with Kristaps Dzonsons</title>
289
	    <desc>
283
	    <desc>
290
		Interview with FreeBSD developer George Neville-Neil. We talk about the packet construction set and the packet debugger.
284
		We talk about the Mult project, which is "an on-going
285
		research project to create a high-performance
286
		instance multiplicity system." You can find more
287
		information at http://mult.bsd.lv/. He also gives
288
		a quick update on Sysjail.
291
	    </desc>
289
	    </desc>
292
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk101-freebsd-developer-george.html</overview>
290
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/02/bsdtalk140-mult-project-with-kristaps.html</overview>
293
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,packet construction set,george neville-neil</tags>
291
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,multi project, kristaps dzonsons</tags>
294
	    <files>
292
	    <files>
295
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
293
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
296
		<file>
294
		<file>
297
		    <url>bsdtalk101.mp3</url>
295
		    <url>bsdtalk140.mp3</url>
298
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
296
		    <size>14 Mb</size>
299
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
297
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
300
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
298
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
301
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
299
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
302
		</file>
300
		</file>
303
		<file>
301
		<file>
304
		    <url>bsdtalk101.ogg</url>
302
		    <url>bsdtalk140.ogg</url>
305
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
303
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
306
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
304
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
307
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
305
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
308
		</file>
306
		</file>
309
	    </files>
307
	    </files>
310
	</item>
308
	</item>
311
309
312
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070217">
310
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080131">
313
	    <title>NetBSD Developer Lubomir Sedlacik</title>
311
	    <title>Dru Lavigne</title>
314
	    <desc>
312
	    <desc><![CDATA[
315
		Interview with NetBSD Developer Lubomir Sedlacik. We talk about pkgsrcCon 2007.
313
		<p>
316
	    </desc>
314
		Interview with Dru Lavigne. We talk about her new
317
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk100-netbsd-developer-lubomir.html</overview>
315
		book "The Best of FreeBSD Basics" and also get an
318
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,pkgsrccon,lubomir sedlacik</tags>
316
		update on some other projects including BSD
317
		Certification.
318
		</p><p>
319
		See the following links for more information:
320
		<ul>
321
		<li>https://register.bsdcertification.org/register/get-a-bsdcg-id
322
		<li>http://reedmedia.net/books/freebsd-basics
323
		<li>http://www.osbr.ca
324
		</ul>
325
		</p>
326
	    ]]></desc>
327
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/01/bsdtalk139-dru-lavigne.html</overview>
328
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,dru lavigne,the best of freebsd basics</tags>
319
	    <files>
329
	    <files>
320
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
330
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
321
		<file>
331
		<file>
322
		    <url>bsdtalk100.mp3</url>
332
		    <url>bsdtalk139.mp3</url>
323
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
333
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
324
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
334
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
325
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
335
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
326
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
336
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
327
		</file>
337
		</file>
328
		<file>
338
		<file>
329
		    <url>bsdtalk100.ogg</url>
339
		    <url>bsdtalk139.ogg</url>
330
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
340
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
331
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
341
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
332
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
342
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
333
		</file>
343
		</file>
334
	    </files>
344
	    </files>
335
	</item>
345
	</item>
336
346
337
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070209">
347
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080125">
338
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon PC Chair George Neville-Neil</title>
348
	    <title>Central Syslog</title>
339
	    <desc>
349
	    <desc><![CDATA[
340
		Interview with AsiaBSDCon 2007 Program Committee Chair George Neville-Neil.
350
		Setting up a central syslog server.
341
	    </desc>
351
		<ul>
342
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk099-asiabsdcon-pc-chair-george.html</overview>
352
		<li>If you are concerned about the security of your logs, use a dedicated machine and lock it down.
343
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,asiabsdcon,george neville-neil</tags>
353
		<li>Keep clocks in sync.
354
		<li>You may need to change log rotation schedule in /etc/newsyslog.conf. You can rotate based in size and/or time. This can be as much a policy decision as a hardware decision.
355
		<li>On central log host, change syslogd flags to listen to network. Each BSD does this differently, so check the man pages. Also, check out the -n flag for busy environments.
356
		<li>Make sure host firewall allows syslog traffic through.
357
		<li>Be careful to limit syslog traffic to just the trusted network or hosts. FreeBSD man page refers to syslogd as a "remote disk filling service".
358
		<li>For heavy logging environments, it is important to have a dedicated network. A down syslogd server can create a lot of "ARP who-has" broadcasts.
359
		<li>Most network devices such as printers and commercial firewalls support sending to a central syslog server. Take a look at "Snare" for Windows hosts.
360
		<li>To send messages from a Unix host, specify the host name prepended with @ instead of a file for logging in /etc/syslog.conf. For example, change /var/log/xferlog to @loghost.mydomain.biz. You can also copy and edit the line to have it log to both a local file and a remote host.
361
		</ul>
362
	    ]]></desc>
363
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/01/bsdtalk138-central-syslog.html</overview>
364
	    <tags>bsdtalk,syslog</tags>
344
	    <files>
365
	    <files>
345
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
366
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
346
		<file>
367
		<file>
347
		    <url>bsdtalk099.mp3</url>
368
		    <url>bsdtalk138.mp3</url>
348
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
369
		    <size>3 Mb</size>
349
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
370
		    <length>7 minutes</length>
350
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
371
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
351
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
372
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
352
		</file>
373
		</file>
353
		<file>
374
		<file>
354
		    <url>bsdtalk099.ogg</url>
375
		    <url>bsdtalk138.ogg</url>
355
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
376
		    <length>7 minutes</length>
356
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
377
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
357
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
378
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
358
		</file>
379
		</file>
359
	    </files>
380
	    </files>
360
	</item>
381
	</item>
361
382
362
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070208">
383
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20080108">
363
	    <title>DragonFlyBSD Developer Matthew Dillon</title>
384
	    <title>Open Community Camp with Marten Vijn</title>
364
	    <desc>
385
	    <desc>
365
		Interview with DragonFlyBSD developer Matthew Dillon.
386
		Interview with Marten Vijn about www.OpenCommunityCamp.org.
366
		We talk about the 1.8 release.
367
	    </desc>
387
	    </desc>
368
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk098-dragonflybsd-developer.html</overview>
388
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2008/01/bsdtalk137-open-community-camp-with.html</overview>
369
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,dragonflybsd,mathew dillon</tags>
389
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,opencommunitycamp,marten vijn</tags>
370
	    <files>
390
	    <files>
371
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
391
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
372
		<file>
392
		<file>
373
		    <url>bsdtalk098.mp3</url>
393
		    <url>bsdtalk137.mp3</url>
374
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
394
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
375
		    <length>24 minutes</length>
395
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
376
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
396
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
377
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
397
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
378
		</file>
398
		</file>
379
		<file>
399
		<file>
380
		    <url>bsdtalk098.ogg</url>
400
		    <url>bsdtalk137.ogg</url>
381
		    <length>24 minutes</length>
401
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
382
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
402
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
383
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
403
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
384
		</file>
404
		</file>
385
	    </files>
405
	    </files>
386
	</item>
406
	</item>
387
407
388
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070202">
408
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071221">
389
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Pierre-Yves Ritschard</title>
409
	    <title>PF with Peter N. M. Hansteen</title>
390
	    <desc>
410
	    <desc>
391
		Interview with OpenBSD Developer Pierre-Yves
411
		An interview with Peter N. M. Hansteen, recorded
392
		Ritschard. We talk about hoststated.
412
		by Michael Dexter on behalf of BSDTalk. If you would
413
		like to learn more about the PF firewall, check out
414
		"The Book of PF" which is available at
415
		http://nostarch.com/frameset.php?startat=pf
393
	    </desc>
416
	    </desc>
394
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk097-openbsd-developer-pierre.html</overview>
417
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/12/bsdtalk136-pf-with-peter-n-m-hansteen.html</overview>
395
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,hoststated,pierre-yves ritschard</tags>
418
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pf,michael dexter,peter n m hansteen,book of pf</tags>
396
	    <files>
419
	    <files>
397
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
420
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
398
		<file>
421
		<file>
399
		    <url>bsdtalk097.mp3</url>
422
		    <url>bsdtalk136.mp3</url>
400
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
423
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
401
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
424
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
402
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
425
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
403
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
426
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
404
		</file>
427
		</file>
405
		<file>
428
		<file>
406
		    <url>bsdtalk097.ogg</url>
429
		    <url>bsdtalk136.ogg</url>
407
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
430
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
408
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
431
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
409
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
432
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
410
		</file>
433
		</file>
411
	    </files>
434
	    </files>
412
	</item>
435
	</item>
413
436
414
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070129">
437
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071118">
415
	    <title>Artist and Musician Ty Semaka</title>
438
	    <title>Joerg Sonnenberger</title>
416
	    <desc>
439
	    <desc>
417
		Interview with Artist and Musician Ty Semaka. You
440
		Michael Dexter sent me an interview he recorded on
418
		can find his work at http://www.tysemaka.com/, and
441
		behalf of BSDTalk with Joerg Sonnenberger at
419
		also on the OpenBSD CDs, posters, and shirts.
442
		EuroBSDCon 2007.
420
	    </desc>
443
	    </desc>
421
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk096-artist-and-musician-ty.html</overview>
444
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/11/bsdtalk135-joerg-sonnenberger.html</overview>
422
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,artwork,ty semaka</tags>
445
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2007,michael dexter,joerg sonnenberger</tags>
423
	    <files>
446
	    <files>
424
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
447
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
425
		<file>
448
		<file>
426
		    <url>bsdtalk096.mp3</url>
449
		    <url>bsdtalk135.mp3</url>
427
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
450
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
428
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
451
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
429
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
452
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
430
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
453
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
431
		</file>
454
		</file>
432
		<file>
455
		<file>
433
		    <url>bsdtalk096.ogg</url>
456
		    <url>bsdtalk135.ogg</url>
434
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
457
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
435
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
458
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
436
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
459
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
437
		</file>
460
		</file>
438
	    </files>
461
	    </files>
439
	</item>
462
	</item>
440
463
441
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070124">
464
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071023">
442
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Claudio Jeker</title>
465
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon Update with Hiroki Sato and George Neville-Neil</title>
443
	    <desc>
466
	    <desc>
444
		Interview with OpenBSD Developer Claudio Jeker.
467
		A quick update on AsiaBSDCon 2008 with Hiroki Sato
468
		and George Neville-Neil. More information at
469
		http://www.asiabsdcon.org/.
445
	    </desc>
470
	    </desc>
446
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk095-openbsd-developer-claudio.html</overview>
471
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/10/bsdtalk134-asiabsdcon-update-with.html</overview>
447
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,claudio jeker</tags>
472
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,asiabsdcon,hiroki sato,george neville-neil</tags>
448
	    <files>
473
	    <files>
449
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
474
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
450
		<file>
475
		<file>
451
		    <url>bsdtalk095.mp3</url>
476
		    <url>bsdtalk134.mp3</url>
452
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
477
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
453
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
478
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
454
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
479
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
455
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
480
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
456
		</file>
481
		</file>
457
		<file>
482
		<file>
458
		    <url>bsdtalk095.ogg</url>
483
		    <url>bsdtalk134.ogg</url>
459
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
484
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
460
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
485
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
461
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
486
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
462
		</file>
487
		</file>
463
	    </files>
488
	    </files>
464
	</item>
489
	</item>
465
490
466
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070121">
491
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071020">
467
	    <title>BSD Consultant Jeremy C. Reed</title>
492
	    <title>OpenCon 2007 update from Marc Balmer</title>
468
	    <desc>
493
	    <desc>
469
		Interview with BSD Consultant Jeremy C. Reed from http://www.reedmedia.net/
494
		A short update on OpenCon 2007 with Marc Balmer.
495
		More information at http://www.opencon.org/.
470
	    </desc>
496
	    </desc>
471
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk094-bsd-consultant-jeremy-c.html</overview>
497
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/10/bsdtalk133-opencon-2007-update-from.html</overview>
472
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,consultancy,jeremy c reed</tags>
498
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,opencon,marc balmer</tags>
473
	    <files>
499
	    <files>
474
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
500
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
475
		<file>
501
		<file>
476
		    <url>bsdtalk094.mp3</url>
502
		    <url>bsdtalk133.mp3</url>
477
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
503
		    <size>3 Mb</size>
478
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
504
		    <length>7 minutes</length>
479
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
505
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
480
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
506
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
481
		</file>
507
		</file>
482
		<file>
508
		<file>
483
		    <url>bsdtalk094.ogg</url>
509
		    <url>bsdtalk133.ogg</url>
484
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
510
		    <length>7 minutes</length>
485
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
511
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
486
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
512
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
487
		</file>
513
		</file>
488
	    </files>
514
	    </files>
489
	</item>
515
	</item>
490
516
491
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070121">
517
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071013">
492
	    <title>EMC Lab Admin Glen R. J. Neff</title>
518
	    <title>Richard Stallman</title>
493
	    <desc>
519
	    <desc>
494
		Interview with EMC Lab Administrator Glen R. J. Neff.
520
		Interview with Richard Stallman.
495
	    </desc>
521
	    </desc>
496
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk093-emc-lab-admin-glen-r-j-neff.html</overview>
522
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/10/bsdtalk132-richard-stallman.html</overview>
497
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,emc lab,glen r j neff</tags>
523
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,rms,richard stallman</tags>
498
	    <files>
524
	    <files>
499
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
525
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
500
		<file>
526
		<file>
501
		    <url>bsdtalk093.mp3</url>
527
		    <url>bsdtalk132.ogg</url>
502
		    <size>15 Mb</size>
528
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
503
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
529
		    <length>28 minutes</length>
504
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
530
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
505
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
506
		</file>
507
		<file>
508
		    <url>bsdtalk093.ogg</url>
509
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
510
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
511
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
531
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
512
		</file>
532
		</file>
513
	    </files>
533
	    </files>
514
	</item>
534
	</item>
515
535
516
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070112">
536
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071006">
517
	    <title>Run Your Own Server Podcast Host Adam Glen</title>
537
	    <title>PCC with Anders "Ragge" Magnusson</title>
518
	    <desc>
538
	    <desc>
519
		Interview with Adam Glen, one of the hosts of the Run Your Own Server Podcast.
539
		Interview with Anders "Ragge" Magnusson. We talk
540
		about his work on the Portable C Compiler. More
541
		information can be found at http://pcc.ludd.ltu.se/.
520
	    </desc>
542
	    </desc>
521
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk092-run-your-own-server-podcast.html</overview>
543
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/10/bsdtalk131-pcc-with-anders-ragge.html</overview>
522
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,run your own server,adam glen</tags>
544
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pcc,ragge,anders magnusson</tags>
523
	    <files>
545
	    <files>
524
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
546
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
525
		<file>
547
		<file>
526
		    <url>bsdtalk092.mp3</url>
548
		    <url>bsdtalk131.mp3</url>
527
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
549
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
528
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
550
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
529
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
551
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
530
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
552
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
531
		</file>
553
		</file>
532
		<file>
554
		<file>
533
		    <url>bsdtalk092.ogg</url>
555
		    <url>bsdtalk131.ogg</url>
534
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
556
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
535
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
557
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
536
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
558
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
537
		</file>
559
		</file>
538
	    </files>
560
	    </files>
539
	</item>
561
	</item>
540
562
541
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070107">
563
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20071003">
542
	    <title>Phil Pereira from bsdnexus.com</title>
564
	    <title>Network Stack Virtualization with Marko Zec</title>
543
	    <desc>
565
	    <desc>
544
		Interview with Phil Pereira from bsdnexus.com.
566
		Michael Dexter sent me an interview he recorded on
567
		behalf of BSDTalk with Marko Zec at EuroBSDCon 2007.
568
		More information on the project at
569
		http://imunes.tel.fer.hr/virtnet/.
545
	    </desc>
570
	    </desc>
546
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk091-phil-pereira-from.html</overview>
571
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/10/bsdtalk130-network-stack-virtualization.html</overview>
547
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bsdnexus,phil pereira</tags>
572
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,stack virtualization,marko zec</tags>
548
	    <files>
573
	    <files>
549
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
574
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
550
		<file>
575
		<file>
551
		    <url>bsdtalk091.mp3</url>
576
		    <url>bsdtalk130.mp3</url>
552
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
577
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
553
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
578
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
554
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
579
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
555
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
580
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
556
		</file>
581
		</file>
557
		<file>
582
		<file>
558
		    <url>bsdtalk091.ogg</url>
583
		    <url>bsdtalk130.ogg</url>
559
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
584
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
560
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
585
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
561
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
586
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
562
		</file>
587
		</file>
563
	    </files>
588
	    </files>
564
	</item>
589
	</item>
565
590
566
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070104">
591
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070919">
567
	    <title>Sys Admin Mike Erdely</title>
592
	    <title>BSDCertification Update with Dru Lavigne</title>
568
	    <desc>
593
	    <desc>
569
		Interview with Sys Admin Mike Erdely. You can find more information on his use of binpatch at http://erdelynet.com/binpatch.
594
		Interview with Dru Lavigne. We talk about the
595
		progress of BSDCertification.org and also her new
596
		position with the Open Source Business Resource at
597
		http://www.osbr.ca/.
570
	    </desc>
598
	    </desc>
571
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk090-sys-admin-mike-erdely.html</overview>
599
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/09/bsdtalk129-bsdcertification-update-with.html</overview>
572
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,binpatch,mike erdely</tags>
600
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bsdcertification,dru lavigne</tags>
573
	    <files>
601
	    <files>
574
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
602
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
575
		<file>
603
		<file>
576
		    <url>bsdtalk090.mp3</url>
604
		    <url>bsdtalk129.mp3</url>
577
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
605
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
578
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
606
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
579
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
607
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
580
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
608
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
581
		</file>
609
		</file>
582
		<file>
610
		<file>
583
		    <url>bsdtalk090.ogg</url>
611
		    <url>bsdtalk129.ogg</url>
584
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
612
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
585
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
613
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
586
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
614
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
587
		</file>
615
		</file>
588
	    </files>
616
	    </files>
589
	</item>
617
	</item>
590
618
591
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070103">
619
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070914">
592
	    <title>NetBSD Release Engineer Jeff Rizzo</title>
620
	    <title>Sysjail Revisited with Michael Dexter</title>
593
	    <desc>
621
	    <desc>
594
		Interview with NetBSD Release Engineer Jeff Rizzo. We talk about the upcoming 4.0 release.
622
		Interview with Michael Dexter. We talk about the
623
		new sysjail and the recent system call wrapper
624
		issues.
595
	    </desc>
625
	    </desc>
596
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk089-netbsd-release-engineer.html</overview>
626
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/09/bsdtalk128-sysjail-revisited-with.html</overview>
597
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,jeff rizzo</tags>
627
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,sysjail,michael dexter</tags>
598
	    <files>
628
	    <files>
599
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
629
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
600
		<file>
630
		<file>
601
		    <url>bsdtalk089.mp3</url>
631
		    <url>bsdtalk128.mp3</url>
602
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
632
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
603
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
633
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
604
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
634
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
605
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
635
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
606
		</file>
636
		</file>
607
		<file>
637
		<file>
608
		    <url>bsdtalk089.ogg</url>
638
		    <url>bsdtalk128.ogg</url>
609
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
639
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
610
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
640
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
611
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
641
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
612
		</file>
642
		</file>
613
	    </files>
643
	    </files>
614
	</item>
644
	</item>
615
645
616
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061221">
646
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070901">
617
	    <title>A Year of BSDTalk</title>
647
	    <title>Why I like the CLI</title>
618
	    <desc>
648
	    <desc><![CDATA[
619
		A short ramble about the first year of bsdtalk.
649
		Why I like the CLI:
620
	    </desc>
650
		<ul>
621
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk088-year-of-bsdtalk.html</overview>
651
		<li>Uses minimal resources. Less space, less memory, fewer dependencies.
622
	    <tags>bsdtalk,anniversary</tags>
652
		<li>Transparency. GUI hides internals, limits options.
653
		<li>Similar between Unix-like systems. GUI tools seem to change every week.
654
		<li>Remote management. SSH rocks.
655
		<li>Everything is text. Configs, devices, output. CLI is natural complement.
656
		<li>Pipes and scripts. One time is hard, a thousand times is easy.
657
		<li>Only need a few tools. Grep, sed, awk, vi, cron.
658
		<li>Text config files. Easy to version, share, and comment.
659
		<li>Requires reading skills instead of clicking skills.
660
		<li>Much faster when you know what you are doing.
661
		</ul>
662
	    ]]></desc>
663
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/08/bsdtalk127-why-i-like-cli.html</overview>
664
	    <tags>bsdtalk,cli,will backman</tags>
623
	    <files>
665
	    <files>
624
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
666
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
625
		<file>
667
		<file>
626
		    <url>bsdtalk088.mp3</url>
668
		    <url>bsdtalk127.mp3</url>
627
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
669
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
628
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
670
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
629
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
671
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
630
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
672
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
631
		</file>
673
		</file>
632
		<file>
674
		<file>
633
		    <url>bsdtalk088.ogg</url>
675
		    <url>bsdtalk127.ogg</url>
634
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
676
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
635
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
677
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
636
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
678
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
637
		</file>
679
		</file>
638
	    </files>
680
	    </files>
639
	</item>
681
	</item>
640
682
641
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061211">
683
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070823">
642
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Joseph Koshy</title>
684
	    <title>MidnightBSD founder Lucas Holt</title>
643
	    <desc>
685
	    <desc>
644
		Interview with FreeBSD developer Joseph Koshy about libELF. You can find more information about libELF at http://wiki.freebsd.org/LibElf.
686
		Interview with MidnightBSD founder Lucas Holt.
645
	    </desc>
687
	    </desc>
646
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk087-freebsd-developer-joseph.html</overview>
688
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/08/bsdtalk126-midnightbsd-founder-lucas.html</overview>
647
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,libelf,joseph koshy</tags>
689
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,midnightbsd,lucas holt</tags>
648
	    <files>
690
	    <files>
649
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
691
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
650
		<file>
692
		<file>
651
		    <url>bsdtalk087.mp3</url>
693
		    <url>bsdtalk126.mp3</url>
652
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
694
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
653
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
695
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
654
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
696
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
655
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
697
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
656
		</file>
698
		</file>
657
		<file>
699
		<file>
658
		    <url>bsdtalk087.ogg</url>
700
		    <url>bsdtalk126.ogg</url>
659
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
701
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
660
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
702
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
661
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
703
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
662
		</file>
704
		</file>
663
	    </files>
705
	    </files>
664
	</item>
706
	</item>
665
707
666
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061207">
708
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070816">
667
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Kip Macy</title>
709
	    <title>Matthew Dillon</title>
668
	    <desc>
710
	    <desc>
669
		Interview with FreeBSD developer Kip Macy. We talk about the Ultrasparc T1 port.
711
		Interview with DragonflyBSD's Matthew Dillon. We
712
		talk about the 1.10 release and the design of a new
713
		filesystem.
670
	    </desc>
714
	    </desc>
671
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk086-freebsd-developer-kip-macy.html</overview>
715
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/08/bsdtalk125-matthew-dillon.html</overview>
672
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,ultrasparc t1,kip macy</tags>
716
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,dragonflybsd,mattew dillon</tags>
673
	    <files>
717
	    <files>
674
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
718
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
675
		<file>
719
		<file>
676
		    <url>bsdtalk086.mp3</url>
720
		    <url>bsdtalk125.mp3</url>
677
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
721
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
678
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
722
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
679
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
723
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
680
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
724
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
681
		</file>
725
		</file>
682
		<file>
726
		<file>
683
		    <url>bsdtalk086.ogg</url>
727
		    <url>bsdtalk125.ogg</url>
684
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
728
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
685
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
729
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
686
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
730
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
687
		</file>
731
		</file>
688
	    </files>
732
	    </files>
689
	</item>
733
	</item>
690
734
691
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061201">
735
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070807">
692
	    <title>FreeBSD Port Committer Thomas McLaughlin</title>
736
	    <title>PC-BSD Founder Kris Moore</title>
693
	    <desc>
737
	    <desc>
694
		Interview with FreeBSD Port Committer Thomas McLaughlin about the BSD# project.
738
		Interview with PC-BSD Founder Kris Moore. We talk
739
		about the upcoming 1.4 release.
695
	    </desc>
740
	    </desc>
696
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk085-freebsd-port-committer.html</overview>
741
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/08/bsdtalk124-pc-bsd-founder-kris-moore.html</overview>
697
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,bsd#,thomas mclaughlin</tags>
742
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pc-bsd,kris moore</tags>
698
	    <files>
743
	    <files>
699
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
744
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
700
		<file>
745
		<file>
701
		    <url>bsdtalk085.mp3</url>
746
		    <url>bsdtalk124.mp3</url>
702
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
747
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
703
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
748
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
704
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
749
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
705
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
750
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
706
		</file>
751
		</file>
707
		<file>
752
		<file>
708
		    <url>bsdtalk085.ogg</url>
753
		    <url>bsdtalk124.ogg</url>
709
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
754
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
710
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
755
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
711
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
756
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
712
		</file>
757
		</file>
713
	    </files>
758
	    </files>
714
	</item>
759
	</item>
715
760
716
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061129">
761
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070731">
717
	    <title>FreeBSD Release Engineer Bruce Mah</title>
762
	    <title>William "whurley" Hurley, Chief Architect of Open Source Strategy at BMC Software, Inc.</title>
718
	    <desc>
763
	    <desc>
719
		Interview with FreeBSD Release Engineer Bruce Mah.
764
		Interview with William "whurley" Hurley, Chief
765
		Architect of Open Source Strategy at BMC Software,
766
		Inc. We talk about the BMC Developer Network.
720
	    </desc>
767
	    </desc>
721
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk084-freebsd-release-engineer.html</overview>
768
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/07/bsdtalk123-william-whurley-hurley-chief.html</overview>
722
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,release engineer,bruce mah</tags>
769
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bmc software,whurley,william hurley</tags>
723
	    <files>
770
	    <files>
724
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
771
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
725
		<file>
772
		<file>
726
		    <url>bsdtalk084.mp3</url>
773
		    <url>bsdtalk123.mp3</url>
727
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
774
		    <size>14 Mb</size>
728
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
775
		    <length>28 minutes</length>
729
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
776
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
730
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
777
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
731
		</file>
778
		</file>
732
		<file>
779
		<file>
733
		    <url>bsdtalk084.ogg</url>
780
		    <url>bsdtalk123.ogg</url>
734
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
781
		    <length>28 minutes</length>
735
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
782
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
736
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
783
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
737
		</file>
784
		</file>
738
	    </files>
785
	    </files>
739
	</item>
786
	</item>
740
787
741
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061119">
788
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070727">
742
	    <title>Pkgsrc Developer Johnny Lam</title>
789
	    <title>Embedding FreeBSD with M. Warner Losh</title>
743
	    <desc>
790
	    <desc>
744
		Interview with pkgsrc developer Johnny Lam.
791
		Interview with M. Warner Losh about embedding FreeBSD.
745
	    </desc>
792
	    </desc>
746
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk083-pkgsrc-developer-johnny-lam.html</overview>
793
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/07/bsdtalk122-embedding-freebsd-with-m.html</overview>
747
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pkgsrc,johnny lam</tags>
794
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,embedding freebsd,m warner losh</tags>
748
	    <files>
795
	    <files>
749
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
796
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
750
		<file>
797
		<file>
751
		    <url>bsdtalk083.mp3</url>
798
		    <url>bsdtalk122.mp3</url>
752
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
799
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
753
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
800
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
754
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
801
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
755
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
802
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
756
		</file>
803
		</file>
757
		<file>
804
		<file>
758
		    <url>bsdtalk083.ogg</url>
805
		    <url>bsdtalk122.ogg</url>
759
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
806
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
760
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
807
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
761
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
808
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
762
		</file>
809
		</file>
763
	    </files>
810
	    </files>
764
	</item>
811
	</item>
765
812
766
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061110">
813
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070716">
767
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Jason Wright</title>
814
	    <title>Fast IPSec with George Neville-Neil</title>
768
	    <desc>
815
	    <desc>
769
		Interview with OpenBSD developer Jason Wright. We talk about his work on sparc and also amateur radio.
816
		Interview with George Neville-Neil about Fast IPSec.
770
	    </desc>
817
	    </desc>
771
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk082-openbsd-developer-jason.html</overview>
818
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/07/bsdtalk121-fast-ipsec-with-george.html</overview>
772
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,sparc,radio,jason wright</tags>
819
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,ipsec,george neville-neil</tags>
773
	    <files>
820
	    <files>
774
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
821
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
775
		<file>
822
		<file>
776
		    <url>bsdtalk082.mp3</url>
823
		    <url>bsdtalk121.mp3</url>
777
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
824
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
778
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
825
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
779
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
826
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
780
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
827
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
781
		</file>
828
		</file>
782
		<file>
829
		<file>
783
		    <url>bsdtalk082.ogg</url>
830
		    <url>bsdtalk121.ogg</url>
784
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
831
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
785
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
832
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
786
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
833
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
787
		</file>
834
		</file>
788
	    </files>
835
	    </files>
789
	</item>
836
	</item>
790
837
791
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061107">
838
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070716">
792
	    <title>Thorsten Glaser from MirOS</title>
839
	    <title>BSD Hacker Isaac "Ike" Levy</title>
793
	    <desc>
840
	    <desc>
794
		Interview with Thorsten Glaser from MirOS, which can be found at www.mirbsd.org.
841
		Interview with BSD Hacker Isaac "Ike" Levy. To hear
842
		more of Ike and other NYCBUG audio, visit
843
		http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/
795
	    </desc>
844
	    </desc>
796
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk081-thorsten-glaser-from-miros.html</overview>
845
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/07/bsdtalk120-bsd-hacker-isaac-ike-levy.html</overview>
797
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,miros,thomas glaser</tags>
846
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,nycbug,isaac levy</tags>
798
	    <files>
847
	    <files>
799
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
848
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
800
		<file>
849
		<file>
801
		    <url>bsdtalk081.mp3</url>
850
		    <url>bsdtalk120.mp3</url>
802
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
851
		    <size>13 Mb</size>
803
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
852
		    <length>26 minutes</length>
804
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
853
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
805
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
854
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
806
		</file>
855
		</file>
807
		<file>
856
		<file>
808
		    <url>bsdtalk081.ogg</url>
857
		    <url>bsdtalk120.ogg</url>
809
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
858
		    <length>26 minutes</length>
810
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
859
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
811
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
860
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
812
		</file>
861
		</file>
813
	    </files>
862
	    </files>
814
	</item>
863
	</item>
815
864
816
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061103">
865
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070706">
817
	    <title>EuroBSDCon Organizer Massimiliano Stucchi</title>
866
	    <title>Playing with IPv6</title>
818
	    <desc>
867
	    <desc><![CDATA[
819
		Interview with EuroBSDCon organizer Massimiliano Stucchi.
868
		I ramble on about how I have been experimenting
820
	    </desc>
869
		with IPv6. For more details, see <a href="http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/cis341/resources/ipv6-test-lab.html">http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/cis341/resources/ipv6-test-lab.html</a>.
821
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk080-eurobsdcon-organizer.html</overview>
870
	    ]]></desc>
822
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,eurbsdcon,massimiliano stucchi</tags>
871
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/07/bsdtalk119-playing-with-ipv6.html</overview>
872
	    <tags>bsdtalk,ipv6</tags>
823
	    <files>
873
	    <files>
824
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
874
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
825
		<file>
875
		<file>
826
		    <url>bsdtalk080.mp3</url>
876
		    <url>bsdtalk119.mp3</url>
827
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
877
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
828
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
878
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
829
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
879
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
830
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
880
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
831
		</file>
881
		</file>
832
		<file>
882
		<file>
833
		    <url>bsdtalk080.ogg</url>
883
		    <url>bsdtalk119.ogg</url>
834
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
884
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
835
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
885
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
836
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
886
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
837
		</file>
887
		</file>
838
	    </files>
888
	    </files>
839
	</item>
889
	</item>
840
890
841
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061101">
891
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070625">
842
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer David Gwynne</title>
892
	    <title>Sidsel Jensen from EuroBSDCon</title>
843
	    <desc>
893
	    <desc>
844
		Interview with OpenBSD developer David Gwynne. We
894
		Interview with Sidsel Jensen from www.eurobsdcon.org.
845
		talk about the upcoming 4.0 release of OpenBSD and
846
		current projects that he is working on.
847
	    </desc>
895
	    </desc>
848
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk079-openbsd-developer-david.html</overview>
896
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/06/bsdtalk118-sidsel-jensen-from.html</overview>
849
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,david gwynne</tags>
897
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2007,sidsel jensen</tags>
850
	    <files>
898
	    <files>
851
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
899
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
852
		<file>
900
		<file>
853
		    <url>bsdtalk079.mp3</url>
901
		    <url>bsdtalk118.mp3</url>
854
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
902
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
855
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
903
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
856
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
904
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
857
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
905
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
858
		</file>
906
		</file>
859
		<file>
907
		<file>
860
		    <url>bsdtalk079.ogg</url>
908
		    <url>bsdtalk118.ogg</url>
861
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
909
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
862
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
910
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
863
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
911
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
864
		</file>
912
		</file>
865
	    </files>
913
	    </files>
866
	</item>
914
	</item>
867
915
868
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061026">
916
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070614">
869
	    <title>Kris Moore from PC-BSD</title>
917
	    <title>One Time Passwords</title>
870
	    <desc>
918
	    <desc><![CDATA[
871
		Interview with Kris Moore from PC-BSD.
919
		<ul>
872
	    </desc>
920
		<li> Important when you don't trust the computer you are using, such as a library computer or internet kiosk.
873
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk078-kris-moore-from-pc-bsd.html</overview>
921
		<li> Available by default in Free/Net/Open BSD.
874
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pc-bsd,kris moore</tags>
922
		<li> FreeBSD uses OPIE, Net/Open use S/Key.
923
		<li> One time passwords are based on your pass phrase, a non-repeating sequence number, and a seed.
924
		<li> Initial setup should be done directly on the server.
925
		<li> "skeyinit" for Net/Open, "opiepasswd -c" for FreeBSD.
926
		<li> Enter a pass phrase that is not your regular account password.
927
		<li> Find your current sequence number and seed with "opieinfo" or "skeyinfo", for example: "497 pc5246".
928
		<li> Generate a list of the next 10 passwords and write them down, using "opiekey -n 10 497 pc5246" or "skey -n 10 497 pc5246".
929
		<li> When you log in from a remote machine that might have a keystroke logger, you can now use a one time password instead of your regular password.
930
		<li> For OpenBSD, log in as account:skey, for example "bob:skey", which will cause the system to present the s/key challenge.
931
		<li> For NetBSD, the system will always present you with the s/key challenge if it is configured for your account, although you can still use your regular password.
932
		<li> FreeBSD by default will force you to use a one time password if it is configured for your account.
933
		<li> If you want both OPIE and password authentication, FreeBSD allows you to list trusted networks or hosts in /etc/opieaccess.
934
		<li> Instead of carrying a list of passwords around, you can use s/key generators on a portable device that you trust, such as a palm pilot.
935
		<li> For more info, check the man pages.
936
		</ul>
937
	    ]]></desc>
938
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/06/bsdtalk117-one-time-passwords.html</overview>
939
	    <tags>bsdtalk,security,one time passwords</tags>
875
	    <files>
940
	    <files>
876
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
941
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
877
		<file>
942
		<file>
878
		    <url>bsdtalk078.mp3</url>
943
		    <url>bsdtalk117.mp3</url>
879
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
944
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
880
		    <length>21 minutes</length>
945
		    <length>6 minutes</length>
881
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
946
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
882
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
947
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
883
		</file>
948
		</file>
884
		<file>
949
		<file>
885
		    <url>bsdtalk078.ogg</url>
950
		    <url>bsdtalk117.ogg</url>
886
		    <length>21 minutes</length>
951
		    <length>6 minutes</length>
887
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
952
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
888
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
953
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
889
		</file>
954
		</file>
890
	    </files>
955
	    </files>
891
	</item>
956
	</item>
892
957
893
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061018">
958
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070607">
894
	    <title>Matt Olander from iXsystems</title>
959
	    <title>Rick Macklem and NFSv4</title>
895
	    <desc>
960
	    <desc>
896
		Interview with Matt Olander from www.iXsystems.com.
961
		Interview with Rick Macklem about his work with NFSv4.
962
		More information at http://snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca/nfsv4/.
897
	    </desc>
963
	    </desc>
898
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk077-matt-olander-from-ixsystems.html</overview>
964
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/06/bsdtalk116-rick-macklem-and-nfsv4.html</overview>
899
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,ixsystems,matt olander</tags>
965
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,nfs,rick macklem</tags>
900
	    <files>
966
	    <files>
901
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
967
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
902
		<file>
968
		<file>
903
		    <url>bsdtalk077.mp3</url>
969
		    <url>bsdtalk116.mp3</url>
904
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
970
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
905
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
971
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
906
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
972
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
907
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
973
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
908
		</file>
974
		</file>
909
		<file>
975
		<file>
910
		    <url>bsdtalk077.ogg</url>
976
		    <url>bsdtalk116.ogg</url>
911
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
977
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
912
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
978
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
913
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
979
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
914
		</file>
980
		</file>
915
	    </files>
981
	    </files>
916
	</item>
982
	</item>
917
983
918
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061013">
984
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070602">
919
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Marc Balmer</title>
985
	    <title>Jun-ichiro "itojun" Itoh Hagino</title>
920
	    <desc>
986
	    <desc>
921
		Interview with OpenBSD Developer Marc Balmer. We
987
		Interview with KAME project core researcher Jun-ichiro
922
		talk about www.opencon.org and his work with OpenBSD.
988
		"itojun" Itoh Hagino.
923
	    </desc>
989
	    </desc>
924
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk076-openbsd-developer-marc.html</overview>
990
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/06/bsdtalk115-few-freebsd-core-team.html</overview>
925
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,opencon,openbsd,marc balmer</tags>
991
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,kame,itojun,jun-ichiro itoh hagino</tags>
926
	    <files>
992
	    <files>
927
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
993
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
928
		<file>
994
		<file>
929
		    <url>bsdtalk076.mp3</url>
995
		    <url>bsdtalk115.mp3</url>
930
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
996
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
931
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
997
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
932
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
998
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
933
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
999
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
934
		</file>
1000
		</file>
935
		<file>
1001
		<file>
936
		    <url>bsdtalk076.ogg</url>
1002
		    <url>bsdtalk115.ogg</url>
937
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1003
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
938
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1004
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
939
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1005
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
940
		</file>
1006
		</file>
941
	    </files>
1007
	    </files>
942
	</item>
1008
	</item>
943
1009
944
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061006">
1010
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070526">
945
	    <title>Interview with Hiroki Sato and George Neville-Neil from AsiaBSDCon</title>
1011
	    <title>A Few FreeBSD Core Team Members</title>
946
	    <desc>
1012
	    <desc>
947
		Interview with Hiroki Sato and George Neville-Neil
1013
		An interview with a few of the FreeBSD Core Team
948
		from AsiaBSDCon.  More info at http://www.asiabsdcon.org/.
1014
		members: Brooks Davis, Warner Losh, George V.
1015
		Neville-Neil, Hiroki Sato, and Robert Watson. The
1016
		interview was recorded at BSDCan in Ottawa, Cananda.
949
	    </desc>
1017
	    </desc>
950
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk074-interview-with-hiroki-sato.html</overview>
1018
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk114-few-freebsd-core-team.html</overview>
951
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,asiabsdcon,hiroki sao,george neville-neil</tags>
1019
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd core,brooks davis,warner losh,george neville-neil,hiroki sato,robert watson</tags>
952
	    <files>
1020
	    <files>
953
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1021
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
954
		<file>
1022
		<file>
955
		    <url>bsdtalk074.mp3</url>
1023
		    <url>bsdtalk114.mp3</url>
956
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1024
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
957
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1025
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
958
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1026
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
959
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1027
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
960
		</file>
1028
		</file>
961
		<file>
1029
		<file>
962
		    <url>bsdtalk074.ogg</url>
1030
		    <url>bsdtalk114.ogg</url>
963
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1031
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
964
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1032
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
965
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1033
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
966
		</file>
1034
		</file>
967
	    </files>
1035
	    </files>
968
	</item>
1036
	</item>
969
1037
970
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061005">
1038
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070524">
971
	    <title>Interview with Sevan Janiyan</title>
1039
	    <title>Designing BSD Rootkits Author Joseph Kong</title>
972
	    <desc>
1040
	    <desc>
973
		 Interview with Sevan Janiyan. We talk about the
1041
		Interview with Joseph Kong, Author of "Designing
974
		 Brighton Chilli WiFi hotspot project, which can
1042
		BSD Rootkits: An Introduction to Kernel Hacking"
975
		 be found at http://brightonchilli.geeklan.co.uk/
1043
		from No Starch Press. The interview was recorded
1044
		at BSDCan in Ottawa.
976
	    </desc>
1045
	    </desc>
977
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk073-interview-with-sevan.html</overview>
1046
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk113-designing-bsd-rootkits.html</overview>
978
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,brighton chilli wifi,sevan janiyan</tags>
1047
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,kernel,rootkits,books,joseph kong</tags>
979
	    <files>
1048
	    <files>
980
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1049
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
981
		<file>
1050
		<file>
982
		    <url>bsdtalk073.mp3</url>
1051
		    <url>bsdtalk113.mp3</url>
983
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1052
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
984
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1053
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
985
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1054
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
986
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1055
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
987
		</file>
1056
		</file>
988
		<file>
1057
		<file>
989
		    <url>bsdtalk073.ogg</url>
1058
		    <url>bsdtalk113.ogg</url>
990
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1059
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
991
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1060
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
992
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1061
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
993
		</file>
1062
		</file>
994
	    </files>
1063
	    </files>
995
	</item>
1064
	</item>
996
1065
997
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061003">
1066
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070519">
998
	    <title>Interview with Poul-Henning Kamp about Varnish</title>
1067
	    <title>Qing Li and Tatuya Jinmei</title>
999
	    <desc>
1068
	    <desc>
1000
		 Interview with Poul-Henning Kamp about Varnish. More information at http://www.varnish-cache.org/.
1069
		Interview at at BSDCan with Qing Li and Tatuya
1070
		Jinmei. We talk about the books that they authored
1071
		with Keiichi Shima: "IPv6 Core Protocols Implementation"
1072
		and "IPv6 Advanced Protocols Implementation." The
1073
		books are available at Amazon.com or on the publisher's
1074
		web site, www.mkp.com.
1001
	    </desc>
1075
	    </desc>
1002
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk072-interview-with-poul-henning.html</overview>
1076
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk112-qing-li-and-tatuya-jinmei.html</overview>
1003
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,varnish,poul-henning kamp</tags>
1077
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,ipv6,books,qing li,tatuya jimei</tags>
1004
	    <files>
1078
	    <files>
1005
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1079
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1006
		<file>
1080
		<file>
1007
		    <url>bsdtalk072.mp3</url>
1081
		    <url>bsdtalk112.mp3</url>
1008
		    <size>17 Mb</size>
1082
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
1009
		    <length>36 minutes</length>
1083
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
1010
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1084
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1011
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1085
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1012
		</file>
1086
		</file>
1013
		<file>
1087
		<file>
1014
		    <url>bsdtalk072.ogg</url>
1088
		    <url>bsdtalk112.ogg</url>
1015
		    <length>36 minutes</length>
1089
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
1016
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1090
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1017
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1091
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1018
		</file>
1092
		</file>
1019
	    </files>
1093
	    </files>
1020
	</item>
1094
	</item>
1021
1095
1022
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060929">
1096
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070510">
1023
	    <title>Interview with Einar Th. Einarsson from f-prot.com</title>
1097
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Diane Bruce</title>
1024
	    <desc>
1098
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1025
		 Interview with Einar Th. Einarsson from f-prot.com.
1099
		Interview with FreeBSD developer Diane Bruce. We
1026
	    </desc>
1100
		talk about Ham Radio on BSD.
1027
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk071-interview-with-einar-th.html</overview>
1101
		Slides from one of her talks:
1028
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,f-prot,einar th einarsson</tags>
1102
		<a href="http://www.oarc.net/hamradio_on_freebsd.pdf">http://www.oarc.net/hamradio_on_freebsd.pdf</a>
1103
	    ]]></desc>
1104
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk111-freebsd-developer-diane.html</overview>
1105
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,diana bruce</tags>
1029
	    <files>
1106
	    <files>
1030
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1107
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1031
		<file>
1108
		<file>
1032
		    <url>bsdtalk071.mp3</url>
1109
		    <url>bsdtalk111.mp3</url>
1033
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1110
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
1034
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1111
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
1035
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1112
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1036
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1113
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1037
		</file>
1114
		</file>
1038
		<file>
1115
		<file>
1039
		    <url>bsdtalk071.ogg</url>
1116
		    <url>bsdtalk111.ogg</url>
1040
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1117
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
1041
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1118
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1042
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1119
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1043
		</file>
1120
		</file>
1044
	    </files>
1121
	    </files>
1045
	</item>
1122
	</item>
1046
1123
1047
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060928">
1124
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070503">
1048
	    <title>Interview with NetBSD Developer Tim Rightnour</title>
1125
	    <title>Josh Berkus, Postgresql Lead at Sun Microsystems</title>
1049
	    <desc>
1126
	    <desc>
1050
		 Interview with NetBSD Developer Tim Rightnour. We talk about NetBSD/prep.
1127
		Interview with Josh Berkus, Postgresql Lead at Sun
1128
		Microsystems. We talk about the upcoming PGCon on
1129
		23-24 May 2007. More info at http://www.pgcon.org.
1051
	    </desc>
1130
	    </desc>
1052
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk070-interview-with-netbsd.html</overview>
1131
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/05/bsdtalk110-josh-berkus-postgresql-lead.html</overview>
1053
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,tim rightnour</tags>
1132
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,postgresql,josh berkus</tags>
1054
	    <files>
1133
	    <files>
1055
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1134
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1056
		<file>
1135
		<file>
1057
		    <url>bsdtalk070.mp3</url>
1136
		    <url>bsdtalk110.mp3</url>
1058
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1137
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
1059
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1138
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1060
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1139
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1061
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1140
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1062
		</file>
1141
		</file>
1063
		<file>
1142
		<file>
1064
		    <url>bsdtalk070.ogg</url>
1143
		    <url>bsdtalk110.ogg</url>
1065
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1144
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1066
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1145
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1067
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1146
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1068
		</file>
1147
		</file>
1069
	    </files>
1148
	    </files>
1070
	</item>
1149
	</item>
1071
1150
1072
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060923">
1151
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070426">
1073
	    <title>Interview with Christoph Egger about Xen on OpenBSD</title>
1152
	    <title>George Neville-Neil and Using VMs for Development</title>
1074
	    <desc>
1153
	    <desc>
1075
		 Interview with Christoph Egger about Xen on OpenBSD.
1154
		George Neville-Neil and Using VMs for Development.
1155
		See http://blogs.freebsdish.org/gnn for more
1156
		information.
1076
	    </desc>
1157
	    </desc>
1077
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk069-interview-with-christoph.html</overview>
1158
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk109-george-neville-neil-and.html</overview>
1078
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,xen,christoph egger</tags>
1159
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,virtual machines,george neville-neil</tags>
1079
	    <files>
1160
	    <files>
1080
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1161
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1081
		<file>
1162
		<file>
1082
		    <url>bsdtalk069.mp3</url>
1163
		    <url>bsdtalk109.mp3</url>
1083
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1164
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1084
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1165
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
1085
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1166
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1086
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1167
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1087
		</file>
1168
		</file>
1088
		<file>
1169
		<file>
1089
		    <url>bsdtalk069.ogg</url>
1170
		    <url>bsdtalk109.ogg</url>
1090
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1171
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
1091
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1172
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1092
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1173
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1093
		</file>
1174
		</file>
1094
	    </files>
1175
	    </files>
1095
	</item>
1176
	</item>
1096
1177
1097
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060923">
1178
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070419">
1098
	    <title>Interview with OpenBSD Developer Bob Beck</title>
1179
	    <title>Matt Juszczak from bsdjobs.net</title>
1099
	    <desc>
1180
	    <desc>
1100
		 Interview with OpenBSD Developer Bob Beck.
1181
		Interview with Matt Juszczak from bsdjobs.net.
1101
	    </desc>
1182
	    </desc>
1102
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk068-interview-with-openbsd.html</overview>
1183
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk108-matt-juszczak-from.html</overview>
1103
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,bob beck</tags>
1184
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bsdjobs,matt juszczak</tags>
1104
	    <files>
1185
	    <files>
1105
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1186
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1106
		<file>
1187
		<file>
1107
		    <url>bsdtalk068.mp3</url>
1188
		    <url>bsdtalk108.mp3</url>
1108
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
1189
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
1109
		    <length>26 minutes</length>
1190
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
1110
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1191
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1111
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1192
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1112
		</file>
1193
		</file>
1113
		<file>
1194
		<file>
1114
		    <url>bsdtalk068.ogg</url>
1195
		    <url>bsdtalk108.ogg</url>
1115
		    <length>26 minutes</length>
1196
		    <length>4 minutes</length>
1116
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1197
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1117
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1198
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1118
		</file>
1199
		</file>
1119
	    </files>
1200
	    </files>
1120
	</item>
1201
	</item>
1121
1202
1122
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060922">
1203
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070412">
1123
	    <title>Interview with Dan Langille about backups</title>
1204
	    <title>Contiki OS Developer Adam Dunkels</title>
1124
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1205
	    <desc>
1125
		 Interview with Dan Langille about backups. Check out <a href="http://www.bacula.org/">http://www.bacula.org/</a>
1206
		Interview with Contiki OS Developer Adam Dunkels. You can find more information at http://www.sics.se/contiki/.
1126
		]]>
1127
	    </desc>
1207
	    </desc>
1128
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk067-interview-with-dan-langille.html</overview>
1208
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk107-contiki-os-developer-adam.html</overview>
1129
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bacula,dan langille</tags>
1209
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,contikios,adam dunkels</tags>
1130
	    <files>
1210
	    <files>
1131
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1211
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1132
		<file>
1212
		<file>
1133
		    <url>bsdtalk067.mp3</url>
1213
		    <url>bsdtalk107.mp3</url>
1134
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
1214
		    <size>13 Mb</size>
1135
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
1215
		    <length>27 minutes</length>
1136
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1216
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1137
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1217
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1138
		</file>
1218
		</file>
1139
		<file>
1219
		<file>
1140
		    <url>bsdtalk067.ogg</url>
1220
		    <url>bsdtalk107.ogg</url>
1141
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
1221
		    <length>27 minutes</length>
1142
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1222
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1143
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1223
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1144
		</file>
1224
		</file>
1145
	    </files>
1225
	    </files>
1146
	</item>
1226
	</item>
1147
1227
1148
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060921">
1228
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070409">
1149
	    <title>Interview with Michael Dexter about sysjail</title>
1229
	    <title>Interview with Matthieu Herrb about Xenocara</title>
1150
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1230
	    <desc>
1151
		 Interview with Michael Dexter about sysjail. <a href="http://sysjail.bsd.lv/">http://sysjail.bsd.lv/</a>
1231
		Interview with Matthieu Herrb about Xenocara.
1152
		]]>
1153
	    </desc>
1232
	    </desc>
1154
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk066-interview-with-michael.html</overview>
1233
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/04/bsdtalk106-interview-with-matthieu.html</overview>
1155
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,sysjail,michael dexter</tags>
1234
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,xenocara,matthieu herrb</tags>
1156
	    <files>
1235
	    <files>
1157
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1236
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1158
		<file>
1237
		<file>
1159
		    <url>bsdtalk066.mp3</url>
1238
		    <url>bsdtalk106.mp3</url>
1160
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
1239
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1161
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
1240
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
1162
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1241
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1163
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1242
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1164
		</file>
1243
		</file>
1165
		<file>
1244
		<file>
1166
		    <url>bsdtalk066.ogg</url>
1245
		    <url>bsdtalk106.ogg</url>
1167
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
1246
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
1168
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1247
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1169
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1248
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1170
		</file>
1249
		</file>
1171
	    </files>
1250
	    </files>
1172
	</item>
1251
	</item>
1173
1252
1174
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060915">
1253
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070401">
1175
	    <title><![CDATA[ Interview with Eirik &Oslash;verby.]]></title>
1254
	    <title>Intro to PF with Jason Dixon</title>
1176
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1255
	    <desc>
1177
		Interview with Eirik &Oslash;verby. We talk about his use of BSD and Jails.
1256
		Introduction to PF with Jason Dixon.
1178
		]]>
1179
	    </desc>
1257
	    </desc>
1180
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk065-interview-with-eirik-verby.html</overview>
1258
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk105-intro-to-pf-with-jason-dixon.html</overview>
1181
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,jails,eirik Overby</tags>
1259
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pf,jason dixon</tags>
1182
	    <files>
1260
	    <files>
1183
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1261
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1184
		<file>
1262
		<file>
1185
		    <url>bsdtalk065.mp3</url>
1263
		    <url>bsdtalk105.mp3</url>
1186
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
1264
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
1187
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1265
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
1188
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1266
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1189
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1267
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1190
		</file>
1268
		</file>
1191
		<file>
1269
		<file>
1192
		    <url>bsdtalk065.ogg</url>
1270
		    <url>bsdtalk105.ogg</url>
1193
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1271
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
1194
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1272
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1195
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1273
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1196
		</file>
1274
		</file>
1197
	    </files>
1275
	    </files>
1198
	</item>
1276
	</item>
1199
1277
1200
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060913">
1278
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070321">
1201
	    <title>Interview with NetBSD Developer Jason Thorpe</title>
1279
	    <title>Getting to know X</title>
1202
	    <desc>
1280
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1203
		 Interview with NetBSD Developer Jason Thorpe
1281
		<p>
1204
	    </desc>
1282
		Getting to know the X Window System.<br>
1205
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk064-interview-with-netbsd.html</overview>
1283
		Make sure you are in a text only mode. You might
1206
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,jason thorpe</tags>
1284
		need to change how the system boots, or boot into
1285
		single user mode.
1286
		</p><p>
1287
		<ul>
1288
		<li>"startx" to make sure X is working right.
1289
		<li>"X" by itself gives the basic grey screen.
1290
		<li>"ctrl" and "alt" and "backspace" keys at the same time will zap X.
1291
		<li>"X & xterm -display :0"
1292
		<li>"xterm -geometry +300+300"
1293
		<li>"twm" or "metacity"
1294
		</ul>
1295
		</p>
1296
	    ]]></desc>
1297
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk104-getting-to-know-x.html</overview>
1298
	    <tags>bsdtalk,X</tags>
1207
	    <files>
1299
	    <files>
1208
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1300
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1209
		<file>
1301
		<file>
1210
		    <url>bsdtalk064.mp3</url>
1302
		    <url>bsdtalk104.mp3</url>
1211
		    <size>18 Mb</size>
1303
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
1212
		    <length>38 minutes</length>
1304
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
1213
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1305
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1214
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1306
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1215
		</file>
1307
		</file>
1216
		<file>
1308
		<file>
1217
		    <url>bsdtalk064.ogg</url>
1309
		    <url>bsdtalk104.ogg</url>
1218
		    <length>38 minutes</length>
1310
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
1219
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1311
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1220
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1312
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1221
		</file>
1313
		</file>
1222
	    </files>
1314
	    </files>
1223
	</item>
1315
	</item>
1224
1316
1225
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060901">
1317
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070313">
1226
	    <title>Interview with Mitchell Smith about BSD and Accessibility</title>
1318
	    <title>Robert Ricci from Emulab</title>
1227
	    <desc>
1319
	    <desc>
1228
		 Interview with Mitchell Smith about BSD and Accessibility.
1320
		Interview with Robert Ricci from www.Emulab.net.
1229
	    </desc>
1321
	    </desc>
1230
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk063-interview-with-mitchell.html</overview>
1322
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk103-robert-ricci-from-emulab.html</overview>
1231
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,accessibility,mitchell smith</tags>
1323
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,emulab,robert ricci</tags>
1232
	    <files>
1324
	    <files>
1233
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1325
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1234
		<file>
1326
		<file>
1235
		    <url>bsdtalk063.mp3</url>
1327
		    <url>bsdtalk103.mp3</url>
1236
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1328
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1237
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1329
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1238
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1330
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1239
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1331
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1240
		</file>
1332
		</file>
1241
		<file>
1333
		<file>
1242
		    <url>bsdtalk063.ogg</url>
1334
		    <url>bsdtalk103.ogg</url>
1243
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1335
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1244
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1336
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1245
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1337
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1246
		</file>
1338
		</file>
1247
	    </files>
1339
	    </files>
1248
	</item>
1340
	</item>
1249
1341
1250
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060822">
1342
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070308">
1251
	    <title>Interview with YAWS developer Claes Klacke Wikstrom</title>
1343
	    <title>Cisco Distinguished Engineer Randall Stewart</title>
1252
	    <desc>
1344
	    <desc>
1253
		 Interview with YAWS developer Claes "Klacke" Wikstrom.
1345
		Interview with Cisco Distinguished Engineer Randall
1346
		Stewart. We talk about the Stream Control Transmission
1347
		Protocol and his work bringing it to FreeBSD.
1254
	    </desc>
1348
	    </desc>
1255
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk062-interview-with-yaws.html</overview>
1349
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/03/bsdtalk102-cisco-distinguished-engineer.html</overview>
1256
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,yaws,claes wikstrom</tags>
1350
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,cisco,freebsd,stream control transmission protocol,randall stewart</tags>
1257
	    <files>
1351
	    <files>
1258
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1352
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1259
		<file>
1353
		<file>
1260
		    <url>bsdtalk062.mp3</url>
1354
		    <url>bsdtalk102.mp3</url>
1261
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1355
		    <size>17 Mb</size>
1262
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1356
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
1263
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1357
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1264
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1358
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1265
		</file>
1359
		</file>
1266
		<file>
1360
		<file>
1267
		    <url>bsdtalk062.ogg</url>
1361
		    <url>bsdtalk102.ogg</url>
1268
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1362
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
1269
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1363
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1270
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1364
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1271
		</file>
1365
		</file>
1272
	    </files>
1366
	    </files>
1273
	</item>
1367
	</item>
1274
1368
1275
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060815">
1369
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070227">
1276
	    <title>Interview with lighttpd developer Jan Kneschke</title>
1370
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer George Neville-Neil</title>
1277
	    <desc>
1371
	    <desc>
1278
		 Interview with lighttpd developer Jan Kneschke.
1372
		Interview with FreeBSD developer George Neville-Neil. We talk about the packet construction set and the packet debugger.
1279
	    </desc>
1373
	    </desc>
1280
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk061-interview-with-lighttpd.html</overview>
1374
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk101-freebsd-developer-george.html</overview>
1281
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,lighttpd,jan kneschke</tags>
1375
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,packet construction set,george neville-neil</tags>
1282
	    <files>
1376
	    <files>
1283
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1377
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1284
		<file>
1378
		<file>
1285
		    <url>bsdtalk061.mp3</url>
1379
		    <url>bsdtalk101.mp3</url>
1286
		    <size>17 Mb</size>
1380
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
1287
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
1381
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1288
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1382
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1289
		    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,lighttpd,jan kneschke</tags>
1383
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1290
		</file>
1384
		</file>
1291
		<file>
1385
		<file>
1292
		    <url>bsdtalk061.ogg</url>
1386
		    <url>bsdtalk101.ogg</url>
1293
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
1387
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1294
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1388
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1295
		    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,lighttpd,jan kneschke</tags>
1389
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1296
		</file>
1390
		</file>
1297
	    </files>
1391
	    </files>
1298
	</item>
1392
	</item>
1299
1393
1300
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060811">
1394
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070217">
1301
	    <title>My BSD History</title>
1395
	    <title>NetBSD Developer Lubomir Sedlacik</title>
1302
	    <desc>
1396
	    <desc>
1303
		 My BSD History, by Will Backman of BSDTalk, and a bit on accessibility.
1397
		Interview with NetBSD Developer Lubomir Sedlacik. We talk about pkgsrcCon 2007.
1304
	    </desc>
1398
	    </desc>
1305
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk060-my-bsd-history.html</overview>
1399
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk100-netbsd-developer-lubomir.html</overview>
1306
	    <tags>bsdtalk,accessibility</tags>
1400
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,pkgsrccon,lubomir sedlacik</tags>
1307
	    <files>
1401
	    <files>
1308
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1402
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1309
		<file>
1403
		<file>
1310
		    <url>bsdtalk060.mp3</url>
1404
		    <url>bsdtalk100.mp3</url>
1311
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
1405
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1312
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
1406
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1313
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1407
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1314
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1408
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1315
		</file>
1409
		</file>
1316
		<file>
1410
		<file>
1317
		    <url>bsdtalk060.ogg</url>
1411
		    <url>bsdtalk100.ogg</url>
1318
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
1412
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1319
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1413
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1320
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1414
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1321
		</file>
1415
		</file>
1322
	    </files>
1416
	    </files>
1323
	</item>
1417
	</item>
1324
1418
1325
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060808">
1419
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070209">
1326
	    <title>Interview with Matt Morley</title>
1420
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon PC Chair George Neville-Neil</title>
1327
	    <desc>
1421
	    <desc>
1328
		 Interview with Matt Morley, BSD user.
1422
		Interview with AsiaBSDCon 2007 Program Committee Chair George Neville-Neil.
1329
	    </desc>
1423
	    </desc>
1330
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk059-interview-with-matt-morley.html</overview>
1424
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk099-asiabsdcon-pc-chair-george.html</overview>
1331
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,matt morley</tags>
1425
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,asiabsdcon,asiabsdcon2007,george neville-neil</tags>
1332
	    <files>
1426
	    <files>
1333
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1427
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1334
		<file>
1428
		<file>
1335
		    <url>bsdtalk059.mp3</url>
1429
		    <url>bsdtalk099.mp3</url>
1336
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
1430
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1337
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
1431
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
1338
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1432
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1339
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1433
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1340
		</file>
1434
		</file>
1341
		<file>
1435
		<file>
1342
		    <url>bsdtalk059.ogg</url>
1436
		    <url>bsdtalk099.ogg</url>
1343
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
1437
		    <length>14 minutes</length>
1344
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1438
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1345
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1439
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1346
		</file>
1440
		</file>
1347
	    </files>
1441
	    </files>
1348
	</item>
1442
	</item>
1349
1443
1350
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060805">
1444
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070208">
1351
	    <title>Interview with Jason Thaxter from gomoos.org</title>
1445
	    <title>DragonFlyBSD Developer Matthew Dillon</title>
1352
	    <desc>
1446
	    <desc>
1353
		  Interview with Jason Thaxter from gomoos.org.
1447
		Interview with DragonFlyBSD developer Matthew Dillon.
1448
		We talk about the 1.8 release.
1354
	    </desc>
1449
	    </desc>
1355
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/07/bsdtalk058-interview-with-jason.html</overview>
1450
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk098-dragonflybsd-developer.html</overview>
1356
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,gomoos,jason thaxter</tags>
1451
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,dragonflybsd,mathew dillon</tags>
1357
	    <files>
1452
	    <files>
1358
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1453
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1359
		<file>
1454
		<file>
1360
		    <url>bsdtalk058.mp3</url>
1455
		    <url>bsdtalk098.mp3</url>
1361
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
1456
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
1362
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
1457
		    <length>24 minutes</length>
1363
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1458
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1364
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1459
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1365
		</file>
1460
		</file>
1366
		<file>
1461
		<file>
1367
		    <url>bsdtalk058.ogg</url>
1462
		    <url>bsdtalk098.ogg</url>
1368
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
1463
		    <length>24 minutes</length>
1369
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
1464
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1370
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1465
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1371
		</file>
1466
		</file>
1372
	    </files>
1467
	    </files>
1373
	</item>
1468
	</item>
1374
1469
1375
	<!-- Source: ukuug
1470
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070202">
1376
	-->
1471
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Pierre-Yves Ritschard</title>
1377
1378
	<item source="ukuug" added="20070402">
1379
	    <title>Lousy virtualization, Happy users: FreeBSD's jail(2) facility</title>
1380
	    <desc>
1472
	    <desc>
1381
		Lousy virtualization, Happy users: FreeBSD's jail(2) facility by Poul-Henning Kamp (phk@FreeBSD.org)
1473
		Interview with OpenBSD Developer Pierre-Yves
1474
		Ritschard. We talk about hoststated.
1382
	    </desc>
1475
	    </desc>
1383
	    <overview>http://www.ukuug.org/events/spring2007/programme/</overview>
1476
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/02/bsdtalk097-openbsd-developer-pierre.html</overview>
1384
	    <tags>ukuug,presentation,freebsd,jails,poul-henning kamp</tags>
1477
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,hoststated,pierre-yves ritschard</tags>
1385
	    <files>
1478
	    <files>
1479
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1386
		<file>
1480
		<file>
1387
		    <url>http://www.ukuug.org/events/spring2007/programme/jails.pdf</url>
1481
		    <url>bsdtalk097.mp3</url>
1388
		    <size>2.7 Mb</size>
1482
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1389
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
1483
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1390
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1484
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1485
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1486
		</file>
1487
		<file>
1488
		    <url>bsdtalk097.ogg</url>
1489
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1490
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1491
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1391
		</file>
1492
		</file>
1392
	    </files>
1493
	    </files>
1393
	</item>
1494
	</item>
1394
1495
1395
	<!-- Source: suug2004
1496
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070129">
1396
	-->
1497
	    <title>Artist and Musician Ty Semaka</title>
1397
1398
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
1399
	    <title>Poul-Henning Kamp - GBDE -- Spook strength disk encryption</title>
1400
	    <desc>
1498
	    <desc>
1401
		GBDE is a disk encryption facility designed with
1499
		Interview with Artist and Musician Ty Semaka. You
1402
		both usability and strength as requirements and it
1500
		can find his work at http://www.tysemaka.com/, and
1403
		attempts to protect both the user and the data. The
1501
		also on the OpenBSD CDs, posters, and shirts.
1404
		talk is about avoiding self-deceiving analysis, how
1405
		to make real world usable cryptography and generally
1406
		protect yourself and your data. Required skill
1407
		level: Laptop user.
1408
	    </desc>
1502
	    </desc>
1409
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
1503
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk096-artist-and-musician-ty.html</overview>
1410
	    <tags>suug,presentation,gbde,poul-henning kamp</tags>
1504
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,artwork,ty semaka</tags>
1411
	    <files>
1505
	    <files>
1506
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1412
		<file>
1507
		<file>
1413
		    <url>http://phk.freebsd.dk/pubs/bsdcon-03.gbde.paper.pdf</url>
1508
		    <url>bsdtalk096.mp3</url>
1414
		    <size>104 Kb</size>
1509
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1415
		    <desc>Paper</desc>
1510
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
1416
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1511
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1512
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1417
		</file>
1513
		</file>
1418
		<file>
1514
		<file>
1419
		    <url>http://www.suug.ch/sucon/04/slides/gbde.pdf</url>
1515
		    <url>bsdtalk096.ogg</url>
1420
		    <size>113 Kb</size>
1516
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
1421
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
1517
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1422
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1518
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1423
		</file>
1519
		</file>
1424
	    </files>
1520
	    </files>
1425
	</item>
1521
	</item>
1426
1522
1427
1523
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070124">
1428
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
1524
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Claudio Jeker</title>
1429
	    <title>Hendrik Scholz - Performance bottleneck detection and removal</title>
1430
	    <desc>
1525
	    <desc>
1431
		Once a system is exposed to heavy load bottlenecks
1526
		Interview with OpenBSD Developer Claudio Jeker.
1432
		need to be addressed to prevent single components
1433
		from slowing down a complex installation. Highlighting
1434
		various hotspots their detection and removal gets
1435
		discussed using real life examples.
1436
	    </desc>
1527
	    </desc>
1437
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
1528
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk095-openbsd-developer-claudio.html</overview>
1438
	    <tags>suug,presentation,performance,hendrik scholz</tags>
1529
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,claudio jeker</tags>
1439
	    <files>
1530
	    <files>
1531
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1440
		<file>
1532
		<file>
1441
		    <url>http://www.wormulon.net/files/pub/FreeBSD_Bottleneck_Detection.pdf</url>
1533
		    <url>bsdtalk095.mp3</url>
1442
		    <size>213 Kb</size>
1534
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1443
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
1535
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1444
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1536
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1537
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1538
		</file>
1539
		<file>
1540
		    <url>bsdtalk095.ogg</url>
1541
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1542
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1543
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1445
		</file>
1544
		</file>
1446
	    </files>
1545
	    </files>
1447
	</item>
1546
	</item>
1448
1547
1449
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
1548
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070121">
1450
	    <title>Max Laier - PF - Extended Introduction</title>
1549
	    <title>BSD Consultant Jeremy C. Reed</title>
1451
	    <desc>
1550
	    <desc>
1452
		The talk will introduce packet filter (pf) - a *BSD
1551
		Interview with BSD Consultant Jeremy C. Reed from http://www.reedmedia.net/
1453
		firewall system - and summarize its history and
1454
		projected future. After providing a short overview
1455
		of pf's general functionality and some firewall
1456
		basics, it will concentrate on packet filter's
1457
		advanced feature-set from the administrator's point
1458
		of view. The talk will also cover the integration
1459
		of ALTQ, a mature framework for traffic shaping and
1460
		priorization. Finally it will provide a short
1461
		overview of the "Common Address Redundancy Protocol"
1462
		(CARP) and its integration in pf.
1463
	    </desc>
1552
	    </desc>
1464
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
1553
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk094-bsd-consultant-jeremy-c.html</overview>
1465
	    <tags>suug,presentation,pf,altq,max laier</tags>
1554
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,consultancy,jeremy c reed</tags>
1466
	    <files>
1555
	    <files>
1556
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1467
		<file>
1557
		<file>
1468
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~mlaier/sucon.pdf</url>
1558
		    <url>bsdtalk094.mp3</url>
1469
		    <size>1 Mb</size>
1559
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1470
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
1560
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1471
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1561
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1472
		</file>
1562
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1473
		<file>
1474
		    <url>http://mirror.switch.ch/sucon-04/max_laier-pf_extended_introduction.avi</url>
1475
		    <size>94 Mb</size>
1476
		    <desc>Video/MPEG</desc>
1477
		    <tags>avi</tags>
1478
		</file>
1563
		</file>
1479
		<file>
1564
		<file>
1480
		    <url>http://mirror.switch.ch/sucon-04/max_laier-pf_extended_introduction.mp3</url>
1565
		    <url>bsdtalk094.ogg</url>
1481
		    <size>22 Mb</size>
1566
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1482
		    <desc>Audio/MP3</desc>
1567
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1483
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1568
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1484
		</file>
1569
		</file>
1485
	    </files>
1570
	    </files>
1486
	</item>
1571
	</item>
1487
1572
1488
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
1573
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070121">
1489
	    <title>Poul-Henning Kamp - Old mistakes repeated (but you do get the source code now)</title>
1574
	    <title>EMC Lab Admin Glen R. J. Neff</title>
1490
	    <desc>
1575
	    <desc>
1491
		UNIX is the best operating system ever designed so
1576
		Interview with EMC Lab Administrator Glen R. J. Neff.
1492
		everybody is running UNIX on their computer, right
1493
		? This presentation takes a partisan looks a why
1494
		UNIX never became a big success in the eighties,
1495
		failed to win the market in the nineties, and still
1496
		struggles in the market in the new millenium.
1497
		Poul-Henning will take a critical look at the
1498
		mistakes of the past and the mistakes of the present
1499
		and try to make it really clear what needs to happen
1500
		for UNIX to become a real success.
1501
	    </desc>
1577
	    </desc>
1502
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
1578
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk093-emc-lab-admin-glen-r-j-neff.html</overview>
1503
	    <tags>suug,presentation,unix,mistakes,poul-henning kamp</tags>
1579
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,emc lab,glen r j neff</tags>
1504
	    <files>
1580
	    <files>
1581
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1505
		<file>
1582
		<file>
1506
		    <url>http://www.suug.ch/sucon/04/slides/oldmistakes.pdf</url>
1583
		    <url>bsdtalk093.mp3</url>
1507
		    <size>65 Kb</size>
1584
		    <size>15 Mb</size>
1508
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
1585
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
1509
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1586
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1587
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1588
		</file>
1589
		<file>
1590
		    <url>bsdtalk093.ogg</url>
1591
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
1592
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1593
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1510
		</file>
1594
		</file>
1511
	    </files>
1595
	    </files>
1512
	</item>
1596
	</item>
1513
1597
1514
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20070114">
1598
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070112">
1515
	    <title>Andre Opperman - The papers I write for EuroBSDCon 05</title>
1599
	    <title>Run Your Own Server Podcast Host Adam Glen</title>
1516
	    <desc>
1600
	    <desc>
1517
		The papers I write for EuroBSDCon 05 on New Networking
1601
		Interview with Adam Glen, one of the hosts of the Run Your Own Server Podcast.
1518
		Feature in FreeBSD 6.0 and Optimizing FreeBSD IP
1519
		and TCP in 7-CURRENT
1520
	    </desc>
1602
	    </desc>
1521
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~andre/</overview>
1603
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk092-run-your-own-server-podcast.html</overview>
1522
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,paper,freebsd,networking,andre opperman</tags>
1604
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,run your own server,adam glen</tags>
1523
	    <files>
1605
	    <files>
1524
		<prefix>http://people.freebsd.org/~andre/</prefix>
1606
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1525
		<file>
1607
		<file>
1526
		    <url>New%20Networking%20Features%20in%20FreeBSD%206.pdf</url>
1608
		    <url>bsdtalk092.mp3</url>
1527
		    <size>92 Kb</size>
1609
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1528
		    <desc>New Networking Features in FreeBSD 6</desc>
1610
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
1529
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1611
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1612
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1530
		</file>
1613
		</file>
1531
		<file>
1614
		<file>
1532
		    <url>Optimizing%20the%20FreeBSD%20IP%20and%20TCP%20Stack.pdf</url>
1615
		    <url>bsdtalk092.ogg</url>
1533
		    <size>1 Mb</size>
1616
		    <length>12 minutes</length>
1534
		    <desc>Optimizing the FreeBSD IP and TCP Stack</desc>
1617
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1535
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1618
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1536
		</file>
1619
		</file>
1537
	    </files>
1620
	    </files>
1538
	</item>
1621
	</item>
1539
1622
1540
	<item source="andreopperman" added="20070114">
1623
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070107">
1541
	    <title>The presentation I gave at SUCON 04</title>
1624
	    <title>Phil Pereira from bsdnexus.com</title>
1542
	    <desc>
1625
	    <desc>
1543
		The presentation I gave at SUCON 04 on 2nd September
1626
		Interview with Phil Pereira from bsdnexus.com.
1544
		2004 about enhancements/changes in FreeBSD 5.3
1545
		Networking Stack.
1546
	    </desc>
1627
	    </desc>
1547
	    <tags>sucon,presentation,freebsd,networking,andre opperman</tags>
1628
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/bsdtalk091-phil-pereira-from.html</overview>
1629
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bsdnexus,phil pereira</tags>
1548
	    <files>
1630
	    <files>
1631
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1549
		<file>
1632
		<file>
1550
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~andre/FreeBSD-5.3-Networking.pdf</url>
1633
		    <url>bsdtalk091.mp3</url>
1551
		    <size>115 Kb</size>
1634
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
1552
		    <desc>FreeBSD-5.3-Networking.pdf</desc>
1635
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1553
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1636
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1637
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1638
		</file>
1639
		<file>
1640
		    <url>bsdtalk091.ogg</url>
1641
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1642
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1643
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1554
		</file>
1644
		</file>
1555
	    </files>
1645
	    </files>
1556
	</item>
1646
	</item>
1557
1647
1558
	<!-- Source: asiabsdcon
1648
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070104">
1559
	-->
1649
	    <title>Sys Admin Mike Erdely</title>
1560
1561
	<item source="asiabsdcon" added="20070317">
1562
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon 2007 Paper/Slides List</title>
1563
	    <desc>
1650
	    <desc>
1564
		Slides and papers of the AsiaBSDCon 2007
1651
		Interview with Sys Admin Mike Erdely. You can find more information on his use of binpatch at http://erdelynet.com/binpatch.
1565
	    </desc>
1652
	    </desc>
1566
	    <overview>http://asiabsdcon.org/papers/</overview>
1653
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk090-sys-admin-mike-erdely.html</overview>
1567
	    <tags>asiabsdcon</tags>
1654
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,binpatch,mike erdely</tags>
1568
	    <files>
1655
	    <files>
1569
		<prefix>http://asiabsdcon.org/papers/</prefix>
1656
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1570
		<file>
1657
		<file>
1571
		    <url>abc2007-proc-cover.pdf</url>
1658
		    <url>bsdtalk090.mp3</url>
1572
		    <size>588 Kb</size>
1659
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1573
		    <desc>Cover page</desc>
1660
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1574
		    <tags>pdf,paper,cover</tags>
1661
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1662
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1575
		</file>
1663
		</file>
1576
		<file>
1664
		<file>
1577
		    <url>abc2007-proc-all.pdf</url>
1665
		    <url>bsdtalk090.ogg</url>
1578
		    <size>6.5 Mb</size>
1666
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1579
		    <desc>Whole of the Proceedings</desc>
1667
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1580
		    <tags>pdf,paper</tags>
1668
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1581
		</file>
1669
		</file>
1670
	    </files>
1671
	</item>
1672
1673
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20070103">
1674
	    <title>NetBSD Release Engineer Jeff Rizzo</title>
1675
	    <desc>
1676
		Interview with NetBSD Release Engineer Jeff Rizzo. We talk about the upcoming 4.0 release.
1677
	    </desc>
1678
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk089-netbsd-release-engineer.html</overview>
1679
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,jeff rizzo</tags>
1680
	    <files>
1681
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1582
		<file>
1682
		<file>
1583
		    <url>P01-paper.pdf</url>
1683
		    <url>bsdtalk089.mp3</url>
1584
		    <size>412 Kb</size>
1684
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1585
		    <desc>A NetBSD-based IPv6 NEMO Mobile Router, Jean Lorchat, Koshiro Mitsuya, Romain Kuntz (Keio University, Japan) [paper]</desc>
1685
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1586
		    <tags>pdf,paper,netbsd,ipv6,nemo,jean lorchat,koshiro mitsuya,romain kuntz</tags>
1686
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1687
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1587
		</file>
1688
		</file>
1588
		<file>
1689
		<file>
1589
		    <url>P02-paper.pdf</url>
1690
		    <url>bsdtalk089.ogg</url>
1590
		    <size>1371 Kb</size>
1691
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1591
		    <desc>Reflections on Building a High Performance Computing Cluster Using FreeBSD, Brooks Davis (The Aerospace Corporation/brooks at FreeBSD.org, USA) [paper]</desc>
1692
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1592
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,high performance computing,brooks davis</tags>
1693
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1593
		</file>
1694
		</file>
1695
	    </files>
1696
	</item>
1697
1698
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061221">
1699
	    <title>A Year of BSDTalk</title>
1700
	    <desc>
1701
		A short ramble about the first year of bsdtalk.
1702
	    </desc>
1703
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk088-year-of-bsdtalk.html</overview>
1704
	    <tags>bsdtalk,anniversary</tags>
1705
	    <files>
1706
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1594
		<file>
1707
		<file>
1595
		    <url>P03-paper.pdf</url>
1708
		    <url>bsdtalk088.mp3</url>
1596
		    <size>86 Kb</size>
1709
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
1597
		    <desc>Support for Radio Clocks in OpenBSD, Marc Balmer (mbalmer at openbsd.org, Switzerland) [paper]</desc>
1710
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
1598
		    <tags>pdf,paper,openbsd,radio clocks,marc balmer</tags>
1711
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1712
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1599
		</file>
1713
		</file>
1600
		<file>
1714
		<file>
1601
		    <url>P04-paper.pdf</url>
1715
		    <url>bsdtalk088.ogg</url>
1602
		    <size>68 Kb</size>
1716
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
1603
		    <desc>puffs - Pass to Userspace Framework File System, Antti Kantee (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland) [paper]</desc>
1717
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1604
		    <tags>pdf,paper,puffs,antii kantee</tags>
1718
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1605
		</file>
1719
		</file>
1720
	    </files>
1721
	</item>
1722
1723
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061211">
1724
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Joseph Koshy</title>
1725
	    <desc>
1726
		Interview with FreeBSD developer Joseph Koshy about libELF. You can find more information about libELF at http://wiki.freebsd.org/LibElf.
1727
	    </desc>
1728
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk087-freebsd-developer-joseph.html</overview>
1729
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,libelf,joseph koshy</tags>
1730
	    <files>
1731
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1606
		<file>
1732
		<file>
1607
		    <url>P04-slides.pdf</url>
1733
		    <url>bsdtalk087.mp3</url>
1608
		    <size>116 Kb</size>
1734
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
1609
		    <desc>puffs - Pass to Userspace Framework File System, Antti Kantee (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland) [slides]</desc>
1735
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
1610
		    <tags>pdf,slides,puffs,antii kantee</tags>
1736
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1737
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1611
		</file>
1738
		</file>
1612
		<file>
1739
		<file>
1613
		    <url>P05-paper.pdf</url>
1740
		    <url>bsdtalk087.ogg</url>
1614
		    <size>140 Kb</size>
1741
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
1615
		    <desc>An ISP Perspective, jail(8) Virtual Private Servers, Isaac Levy (NYC*BUG/LESMUUG, USA) [paper]</desc>
1742
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1616
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,jail,isp,isaac levy</tags>
1743
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1617
		</file>
1744
		</file>
1745
	    </files>
1746
	</item>
1747
1748
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061207">
1749
	    <title>FreeBSD Developer Kip Macy</title>
1750
	    <desc>
1751
		Interview with FreeBSD developer Kip Macy. We talk about the Ultrasparc T1 port.
1752
	    </desc>
1753
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/12/bsdtalk086-freebsd-developer-kip-macy.html</overview>
1754
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,ultrasparc t1,kip macy</tags>
1755
	    <files>
1756
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1618
		<file>
1757
		<file>
1619
		    <url>P05-slides.pdf</url>
1758
		    <url>bsdtalk086.mp3</url>
1620
		    <size>20 Mb</size>
1759
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
1621
		    <desc>An ISP Perspective, jail(8) Virtual Private Servers, Isaac Levy (NYC*BUG/LESMUUG, USA) [slides]</desc>
1760
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
1622
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd,jail,isp,isaac levy</tags>
1761
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1762
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1623
		</file>
1763
		</file>
1624
		<file>
1764
		<file>
1625
		    <url>P06-paper.pdf</url>
1765
		    <url>bsdtalk086.ogg</url>
1626
		    <size>32 Kb</size>
1766
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
1627
		    <desc>Nsswitch Development: Nss-modules and libc Separation and Caching, Michael A Bushkov (Southern Federal University/bushman at FreeBSD.org, Russia) [paper]</desc>
1767
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1628
		    <tags>pdf,paper,nsswitch,michael bushkov</tags>
1768
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1629
		</file>
1769
		</file>
1770
	    </files>
1771
	</item>
1772
1773
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061201">
1774
	    <title>FreeBSD Port Committer Thomas McLaughlin</title>
1775
	    <desc>
1776
		Interview with FreeBSD Port Committer Thomas McLaughlin about the BSD# project.
1777
	    </desc>
1778
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk085-freebsd-port-committer.html</overview>
1779
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,bsd#,thomas mclaughlin</tags>
1780
	    <files>
1781
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1630
		<file>
1782
		<file>
1631
		    <url>P08-paper.pdf</url>
1783
		    <url>bsdtalk085.mp3</url>
1632
		    <size>328 Kb</size>
1784
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
1633
		    <desc>How the FreeBSD Project Works, Robert N M Watson (University of Cambridge/rwatson at FreeBSD.org, United Kingdom) [paper]</desc>
1785
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1634
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,freebsd project,robert watson</tags>
1786
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1787
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1635
		</file>
1788
		</file>
1636
		<file>
1789
		<file>
1637
		    <url>P10-paper.pdf</url>
1790
		    <url>bsdtalk085.ogg</url>
1638
		    <size>311 Kb</size>
1791
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
1639
		    <desc>SHISA: The Mobile IPv6/NEMO BS Stack Implementation Current Status, Keiichi Shima (Internet Initiative Japan Inc., Japan), Koshiro Mitsuya, Ryuji Wakikawa (Keio University, Japan), Tsuyoshi Momose (NEC Corporation, Japan), Keisuke Uehara (Keio University, Japan) [paper]</desc>
1792
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1640
		    <tags>pdf,paper,ipv6,nemo,keiichi shima,koshiro mitsuya,ryuji wakikawa,tsoyoshi momose,keisuke uehara</tags>
1793
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1641
		</file>
1642
		<file>
1643
		    <url>P11-slides.pdf</url>
1644
		    <size>601 Kb</size>
1645
		    <desc>Bluffs: BSD Logging Updated Fast File System, Stephan Uphoff (Yahoo!, Inc./ups at FreeBSD.org, USA) [slides]</desc>
1646
		    <tags>pdf,slides,bluffs,stephan uphoff</tags>
1647
		</file>
1648
		<file>
1649
		    <url>P12-paper.pdf</url>
1650
		    <size>1071 Kb</size>
1651
		    <desc>Implementation and Evaluation of the Dual Stack Mobile IPv6, Koshiro Mitsuya, Ryuji Wakikawa, Jun Murai (Keio University, Japan) [paper]</desc>
1652
		    <tags>pdf,paper,ipv6,koshiro mitsuya,ryuji wakikawa,jun murai</tags>
1653
		</file>
1654
		<file>
1655
		    <url>P15-paper.pdf</url>
1656
		    <size>97 Kb</size>
1657
		    <desc>Security Measures in OpenSSH, Damien Miller (djm at openbsd.org, Australia) [paper]</desc>
1658
		    <tags>pdf,paper,openssh,damien miller</tags>
1659
		</file>
1794
		</file>
1795
	    </files>
1796
	</item>
1797
1798
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061129">
1799
	    <title>FreeBSD Release Engineer Bruce Mah</title>
1800
	    <desc>
1801
		Interview with FreeBSD Release Engineer Bruce Mah.
1802
	    </desc>
1803
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk084-freebsd-release-engineer.html</overview>
1804
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,freebsd,release engineer,bruce mah</tags>
1805
	    <files>
1806
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1660
		<file>
1807
		<file>
1661
		    <url>P16-paper.pdf</url>
1808
		    <url>bsdtalk084.mp3</url>
1662
		    <size>96 Kb</size>
1809
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1663
		    <desc>Porting the ZFS File System to the FreeBSD Operating System, Pawel Jakub Dawidek (pjd at FreeBSD.org, Poland) [paper]</desc>
1810
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1664
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,zfs,pawel jakub dawidek</tags>
1811
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1812
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1665
		</file>
1813
		</file>
1666
		<file>
1814
		<file>
1667
		    <url>P16-slides.pdf</url>
1815
		    <url>bsdtalk084.ogg</url>
1668
		    <size>278 Kb</size>
1816
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1669
		    <desc>Porting the ZFS File System to the FreeBSD Operating System, Pawel Jakub Dawidek (pjd at FreeBSD.org, Poland) [slides]</desc>
1817
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1670
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd,zfs,pawel jakub dawidek</tags>
1818
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1671
		</file>
1819
		</file>
1672
	    </files>
1820
	    </files>
1673
	</item>
1821
	</item>
1674
1822
1675
	<!-- Source: robertwatson
1823
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061119">
1676
	-->
1824
	    <title>Pkgsrc Developer Johnny Lam</title>
1677
1678
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
1679
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from EuroBSDCon 2004</title>
1680
	    <desc>
1825
	    <desc>
1681
		Robert Watson will describe the design and application
1826
		Interview with pkgsrc developer Johnny Lam.
1682
		of the TrustedBSD MAC Framework, a flexible kernel
1683
		security framework developed on FreeBSD, and recently
1684
		experimentally ported to Apple's Darwin operating
1685
		system. The MAC Framework permits loadable access
1686
		control kernel modules to be loaded, modifying the
1687
		security behavior of the operating system, including
1688
		SEBSD, a port of the SELinux FLASK/TE security model
1689
		to FreeBSD.
1690
	    </desc>
1827
	    </desc>
1691
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004eurobsdcon/</overview>
1828
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk083-pkgsrc-developer-johnny-lam.html</overview>
1692
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,slides,trustedbsd,freebsd,mac,robert watson</tags>
1829
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pkgsrc,johnny lam</tags>
1693
	    <files>
1830
	    <files>
1694
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004eurobsdcon/</prefix>
1831
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1695
		<file>
1832
		<file>
1696
		    <url>20041031-eurobsdcon-macframework.pdf</url>
1833
		    <url>bsdtalk083.mp3</url>
1697
		    <size>270 Kb</size>
1834
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1698
		    <desc>TrustedBSD MAC Framework on FreeBSD and Darwin</desc>
1835
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1699
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1836
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1837
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1838
		</file>
1839
		<file>
1840
		    <url>bsdtalk083.ogg</url>
1841
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1842
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1843
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1700
		</file>
1844
		</file>
1701
	    </files>
1845
	    </files>
1702
	</item>
1846
	</item>
1703
1847
1704
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
1848
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061110">
1705
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from UKUUG LISA 2006</title>
1849
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Jason Wright</title>
1706
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1850
	    <desc>
1707
		UKUUG LISA 2006 took place in Durham, UK in March,
1851
		Interview with OpenBSD developer Jason Wright. We talk about his work on sparc and also amateur radio.
1708
		2006. On this page, you can find my slides from
1709
		this conference.
1710
		<br>
1711
		OpenBSM is a BSD-licensed implementation of Sun's
1712
		Basic Security Module (BSM) API and file format,
1713
		and is the foundation of the TrustedBSD audit
1714
		implementation for FreeBSD. This talk will cover
1715
		the requirements, design, and implementation of
1716
		audit support for FreeBSD. Security audit support
1717
		provides detailed logging of security-relevant
1718
		events, and meets the requirements of the CAPP
1719
		Common Criteria protection profile.
1720
		]]>
1721
	    </desc>
1852
	    </desc>
1722
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006ukuuglisa/</overview>
1853
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk082-openbsd-developer-jason.html</overview>
1723
	    <tags>ukuug,slides,openbsm,trustedbsd,freebsd,robert watson</tags>
1854
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,sparc,radio,jason wright</tags>
1724
	    <files>
1855
	    <files>
1725
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006ukuuglisa/</prefix>
1856
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1726
		<file>
1857
		<file>
1727
		    <url>20060323-ukuug2006lisa-audit.pdf</url>
1858
		    <url>bsdtalk082.mp3</url>
1728
		    <size>199 Kb</size>
1859
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1729
		    <desc>CAPP-Compliant Security Event Audit System for Mac OS X and FreeBSD (UKUUG LISA 2006).</desc>
1860
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1730
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1861
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1862
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1863
		</file>
1864
		<file>
1865
		    <url>bsdtalk082.ogg</url>
1866
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
1867
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1868
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1731
		</file>
1869
		</file>
1732
	    </files>
1870
	    </files>
1733
	</item>
1871
	</item>
1734
1872
1735
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
1873
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061107">
1736
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from EuroBSDCon 2006 and FreeBSD Developer Summit</title>
1874
	    <title>Thorsten Glaser from MirOS</title>
1737
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1875
	    <desc>
1738
		EuroBSDCon 2006 took place in Milan, Italy, and not
1876
		Interview with Thorsten Glaser from MirOS, which can be found at www.mirbsd.org.
1739
		only offered excellent food on a flexible schedule,
1740
		but also an interesting array of talks on work
1741
		spanning the BSD's. On this page, you can find my
1742
		slides from the FreeBSD developer summit and full
1743
		conference.
1744
		<br>
1745
		Status report on the TrustedBSD Project: introduction
1746
		and status regarding Audit, plus a TODO list;
1747
		introduction to the priv(9) work recently merged
1748
		to 7.x.
1749
		<br>
1750
		The FreeBSD Project is one of the oldest and most
1751
		successful open source operating system projects,
1752
		seeing wide deployment across the IT industry. From
1753
		the root name servers, to top tier ISPs, to core
1754
		router operating systems, to firewalls, to embedded
1755
		appliances, you can't use a networked computer for
1756
		ten minutes without using FreeBSD dozens of times.
1757
		Part of FreeBSD's reputation for quality and
1758
		reliability comes from the nature of its development
1759
		organization--driven by a hundreds of highly skilled
1760
		volunteers, from high school students to university
1761
		professors. And unlike most open source projects,
1762
		the FreeBSD Project has developers who have been
1763
		working on the same source base for over twenty
1764
		years. But how does this organization work? Who
1765
		pays the bandwidth bills, runs the web servers,
1766
		writes the documentation, writes the code, and calls
1767
		the shots? And how can developers in a dozen time
1768
		zones reach agreement on the time of day, let alone
1769
		a kernel architecture? This presentation will attempt
1770
		to provide, in 45 minutes, a brief if entertaining
1771
		snapshot into what makes FreeBSD run.
1772
		]]>
1773
	    </desc>
1877
	    </desc>
1774
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006eurobsdcon/</overview>
1878
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk081-thorsten-glaser-from-miros.html</overview>
1775
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,robert watson</tags>
1879
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,miros,thomas glaser</tags>
1776
	    <files>
1880
	    <files>
1777
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006eurobsdcon/</prefix>
1881
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1778
		<file>
1882
		<file>
1779
		    <url>20061110-devsummit-trustedbsd.pdf</url>
1883
		    <url>bsdtalk081.mp3</url>
1780
		    <size>166 Kb</size>
1884
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
1781
		    <desc>TrustedBSD presentation on Audit and priv(9) (Developer Summit)</desc>
1885
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1782
		    <tags>pdf,slides,trustedbsd,freebsd</tags>
1886
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1887
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1783
		</file>
1888
		</file>
1784
		<file>
1889
		<file>
1785
		    <url>20061111-eurobsdcon2006-how-freebsd-works.pdf</url>
1890
		    <url>bsdtalk081.ogg</url>
1786
		    <size>4.4 Mb</size>
1891
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1787
		    <desc>How the FreeBSD Project Works (EuroBSDCon 2006 Full Conference)</desc>
1892
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1788
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd,freebsd project</tags>
1893
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1789
		</file>
1894
		</file>
1790
	    </files>
1895
	    </files>
1791
	</item>
1896
	</item>
1792
1897
1793
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
1898
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061103">
1794
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from BSDCan 2006 and FreeBSD Developer Summit</title>
1899
	    <title>EuroBSDCon Organizer Massimiliano Stucchi</title>
1795
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1900
	    <desc>
1796
		As usual, Dan Langille ran an excellent <a
1901
		Interview with EuroBSDCon organizer Massimiliano Stucchi.
1797
		href="http://www.bsdcan.org/">BSDCan conference</a>.
1798
		On this page, you can find my slides from the
1799
		developer summit and full conference, excluding the
1800
		contents of the WIPs, for which I don't have
1801
		permission to redistribute the slides.
1802
		]]>
1803
	    </desc>
1902
	    </desc>
1804
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006bsdcan/</overview>
1903
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/11/bsdtalk080-eurobsdcon-organizer.html</overview>
1805
	    <tags>bsdcan,notes,devsummit,robert watson</tags>
1904
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2006,massimiliano stucchi</tags>
1806
	    <files>
1905
	    <files>
1807
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006bsdcan/</prefix>
1906
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1808
		<file>
1907
		<file>
1809
		    <url>20060511-devsummit-network-cabal-summary.pdf</url>
1908
		    <url>bsdtalk080.mp3</url>
1810
		    <size>72 Kb</size>
1909
		    <size>4 Mb</size>
1811
		    <desc>Notes from the 10 May 2006 Meeting of the Network Stack Cabal (Developer Summit)</desc>
1910
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
1812
		    <tags>pdf,freebsd</tags>
1911
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1912
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1813
		</file>
1913
		</file>
1814
		<file>
1914
		<file>
1815
		    <url>20060511-devsummit-smpng-network-summary.pdf</url>
1915
		    <url>bsdtalk080.ogg</url>
1816
		    <size>91 Kb</size>
1916
		    <length>8 minutes</length>
1817
		    <desc>SMPng Network Stack Update (Developer Summit)</desc>
1917
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1818
		    <tags>pdf,smp</tags>
1918
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1819
		</file>
1919
		</file>
1920
	    </files>
1921
	</item>
1922
1923
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061101">
1924
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer David Gwynne</title>
1925
	    <desc>
1926
		Interview with OpenBSD developer David Gwynne. We
1927
		talk about the upcoming 4.0 release of OpenBSD and
1928
		current projects that he is working on.
1929
	    </desc>
1930
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk079-openbsd-developer-david.html</overview>
1931
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,david gwynne</tags>
1932
	    <files>
1933
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1820
		<file>
1934
		<file>
1821
		    <url>20060511-devsummit-trustedbsd-mac-framework-retrofit.pdf</url>
1935
		    <url>bsdtalk079.mp3</url>
1822
		    <size>120 Kb</size>
1936
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
1823
		    <desc>TrustedBSD Project Update (Developer Summit)</desc>
1937
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1824
		    <tags>pdf,trustedbsd</tags>
1938
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1939
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1825
		</file>
1940
		</file>
1826
		<file>
1941
		<file>
1827
		    <url>20060512-bsdcan2006-how-freebsd-works.pdf</url>
1942
		    <url>bsdtalk079.ogg</url>
1828
		    <size>4.4 Mb Kb</size>
1943
		    <length>16 minutes</length>
1829
		    <desc>How the FreeBSD Project Works (BSDCan 2006 Full Conference)</desc>
1944
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1830
		    <tags>pdf,freebsd,freebsd project</tags>
1945
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1831
		</file>
1946
		</file>
1832
	    </files>
1947
	    </files>
1833
	</item>
1948
	</item>
1834
1949
1835
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
1950
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061026">
1836
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from EuroBSDCon 2005</title>
1951
	    <title>Kris Moore from PC-BSD</title>
1837
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1952
	    <desc>
1838
		EuroBSDCon 2005 took place in Basel, Switzerland
1953
		Interview with Kris Moore from PC-BSD.
1839
		in November, 2005. Due to an injury, I was unable
1840
		to attend the conference itself, and my talks were
1841
		presented in absentia by Poul-Henning Kamp and Ed
1842
		Maste, who have my greatest appreciation!
1843
		<br>
1844
		The FreeBSD SMPng Project has spent the past five
1845
		years redesigning and reimplementing SMP support
1846
		for the FreeBSD operating system, moving from a
1847
		Giant-locked kernel to a fine-grained locking
1848
		implementation with greater kernel threading and
1849
		parallelism. This paper introduces the FreeBSD SMPng
1850
		Project, its architectural goals and implementation
1851
		approach. It then explores the impact of SMPng on
1852
		the FreeBSD network stack, including strategies for
1853
		integrating SMP support into the network stack,
1854
		locking approaches, optimizations, and challenges.
1855
		]]>
1856
	    </desc>
1954
	    </desc>
1857
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2005eurobsdcon/</overview>
1955
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk078-kris-moore-from-pc-bsd.html</overview>
1858
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,slides,freebsd,smp,robert watson,poul-henning kamp,ed maste</tags>
1956
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,pc-bsd,kris moore</tags>
1859
	    <files>
1957
	    <files>
1860
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2005eurobsdcon/</prefix>
1958
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1861
		<file>
1959
		<file>
1862
		    <url>eurobsdcon2005-netperf.pdf</url>
1960
		    <url>bsdtalk078.mp3</url>
1863
		    <size>370 Kb</size>
1961
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
1864
		    <desc>Introduction to Multithreading and Multiprocessing in the FreeBSD SMPng Network Stack</desc>
1962
		    <length>21 minutes</length>
1865
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1963
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1964
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1965
		</file>
1966
		<file>
1967
		    <url>bsdtalk078.ogg</url>
1968
		    <length>21 minutes</length>
1969
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1970
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1866
		</file>
1971
		</file>
1867
	    </files>
1972
	    </files>
1868
	</item>
1973
	</item>
1869
1974
1870
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
1975
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061018">
1871
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from BSDCan 2004</title>
1976
	    <title>Matt Olander from iXsystems</title>
1872
	    <desc><![CDATA[
1977
	    <desc>
1873
		BSDCan 2004 took place at the University of Ottawa
1978
		Interview with Matt Olander from www.iXsystems.com.
1874
		in Ottawa, Canada. On this page, you can find my
1875
		slides from the conference.
1876
		<br>
1877
		Robert Watson will describe a variety of pieces of
1878
		work done as part of the TrustedBSD Project, including
1879
		the TrustedBSD MAC Framework, Audit facilities for
1880
		FreeBSD, as well as supporting infrastructure work
1881
		such as GEOM/GBDE, UFS2, OpenPAM. He will also
1882
		discuss how certification and evaluation play into
1883
		feature selection, design, and documentation.
1884
		]]>
1885
	    </desc>
1979
	    </desc>
1886
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004bsdcan/</overview>
1980
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk077-matt-olander-from-ixsystems.html</overview>
1887
	    <tags>bsdcan,slides,trustedbsd,freebsd,robert watson</tags>
1981
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,ixsystems,matt olander</tags>
1888
	    <files>
1982
	    <files>
1889
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004bsdcan/</prefix>
1983
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1890
		<file>
1984
		<file>
1891
		    <url>20040515-2004bsdcan-trustedbsd.pdf</url>
1985
		    <url>bsdtalk077.mp3</url>
1892
		    <size>277 Kb</size>
1986
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
1893
		    <desc>TrustedBSD: Trusted Operating System Features for BSD</desc>
1987
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1894
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
1988
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
1989
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1990
		</file>
1991
		<file>
1992
		    <url>bsdtalk077.ogg</url>
1993
		    <length>19 minutes</length>
1994
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1995
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1895
		</file>
1996
		</file>
1896
	    </files>
1997
	    </files>
1897
	</item>
1998
	</item>
1898
1999
1899
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
2000
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061013">
1900
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from AsiaBSDCon 2004</title>
2001
	    <title>OpenBSD Developer Marc Balmer</title>
1901
	    <desc>AsiaBSDCon 2004 took place in Taipei, Taiwan, in March 2004, and was hosted by Academia Sinica.</desc>
2002
	    <desc>
1902
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004asiabsdcon/</overview>
2003
		Interview with OpenBSD Developer Marc Balmer. We
1903
	    <tags>asiabsdcon,robert watson</tags>
2004
		talk about www.opencon.org and his work with OpenBSD.
2005
	    </desc>
2006
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk076-openbsd-developer-marc.html</overview>
2007
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,opencon,openbsd,marc balmer</tags>
1904
	    <files>
2008
	    <files>
1905
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004asiabsdcon/</prefix>
2009
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1906
		<file>
2010
		<file>
1907
		    <url>200403-asiabsdcon2004-trustedbsd.pdf</url>
2011
		    <url>bsdtalk076.mp3</url>
1908
		    <size>135 Kb</size>
2012
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
1909
		    <desc>Extensible Kernel Security through the TrustedBSD MAC Framework.</desc>
2013
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1910
		    <tags>pdf,slides,trustedbsd,mac</tags>
2014
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2015
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1911
		</file>
2016
		</file>
1912
		<file>
2017
		<file>
1913
		    <url>20040313-asiabsdcon04-bsdbof.pdf</url>
2018
		    <url>bsdtalk076.ogg</url>
1914
		    <size>1.4 Mb</size>
2019
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
1915
		    <desc>AsiaBSDCon 2004 BSD (FreeBSD) BoF session</desc>
2020
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
1916
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd</tags>
2021
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1917
		</file>
2022
		</file>
1918
	    </files>
2023
	    </files>
1919
	</item>
2024
	</item>
1920
2025
1921
	<!-- Source: dds
2026
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061006">
1922
	-->
2027
	    <title>Interview with Hiroki Sato and George Neville-Neil from AsiaBSDCon</title>
1923
1924
	<item source="dds" added="20070124">
1925
	    <title>Global software development in the FreeBSD project</title>
1926
	    <desc>
2028
	    <desc>
1927
		FreeBSD is a sophisticated operating system developed
2029
		Interview with Hiroki Sato and George Neville-Neil
1928
		and maintained as open-source software by a team
2030
		from AsiaBSDCon.  More info at http://www.asiabsdcon.org/.
1929
		of more than 350 individuals located throughout the
1930
		world. This study uses developer location data, the
1931
		configuration management repository, and records
1932
		from the issue database to examine the extent of
1933
		global development and its effect on productivity,
1934
		quality, and developer cooperation. The key findings
1935
		are that global development allows round-the-clock
1936
		work, but there are some marked differences between
1937
		the type of work performed at different regions.
1938
		The effects of multiple dispersed developers on the
1939
		quality of code and productivity are negligible.
1940
		Mentoring appears to be sometimes associated with
1941
		developers living closer together, but ad-hoc
1942
		cooperation seems to work fine across continents.
1943
	    </desc>
2031
	    </desc>
1944
	    <overview>http://www.spinellis.gr/pubs/</overview>
2032
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk074-interview-with-hiroki-sato.html</overview>
1945
	    <tags>freebsd,article,global software development,domidis spinellis</tags>
2033
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,asiabsdcon,asiabsdcon2006,hiroki sao,george neville-neil</tags>
1946
	    <files>
2034
	    <files>
1947
		<prefix>http://www.spinellis.gr/pubs/</prefix>
2035
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1948
		<file>
1949
		    <url>conf/2006-GSD-FreeBSD/html/GSD-FreeBSD.html</url>
1950
		    <desc>International Workshop on Global Software Development for the Practitioner, pages 73-79. ACM Press, May 2006</desc>
1951
		    <tags>html</tags>
1952
		</file>
1953
		<file>
2036
		<file>
1954
		    <url>conf/2006-GSD-FreeBSD/html/GSD-FreeBSD-presentation.pdf</url>
2037
		    <url>bsdtalk074.mp3</url>
1955
		    <desc>In NASSCOM Quality Summit 2006: Setting benchmarks in global outsourcing, Bangalore, India, September 2006. National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM).</desc>
2038
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
1956
		    <tags>html</tags>
2039
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
2040
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2041
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
1957
		</file>
2042
		</file>
1958
		<file>
2043
		<file>
1959
		    <url>trade/2006-LinuxFormat-GSD/html/GSDEV.htm</url>
2044
		    <url>bsdtalk074.ogg</url>
1960
		    <desc>Linux Format, (11):60?63, September/October 2006. In Greek.</desc>
2045
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
1961
		    <tags>html</tags>
2046
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2047
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1962
		</file>
2048
		</file>
1963
	    </files>
2049
	    </files>
1964
	</item>
2050
	</item>
1965
2051
1966
	<!-- Source: daemonnews
2052
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061005">
1967
	-->
2053
	    <title>Interview with Sevan Janiyan</title>
1968
2054
	    <desc>
1969
	<item source="daemonnews" added="20060524">
2055
		 Interview with Sevan Janiyan. We talk about the
1970
	    <title>BSDCan 2006 Photos</title>
2056
		 Brighton Chilli WiFi hotspot project, which can
1971
	    <desc>BSDCan 2006 Photos by Diane Bruce</desc>
2057
		 be found at http://brightonchilli.geeklan.co.uk/
1972
	    <tags>daily deamon news,photos,bsdcan,diane bruce</tags>
2058
	    </desc>
2059
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk073-interview-with-sevan.html</overview>
2060
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,brighton chilli wifi,sevan janiyan</tags>
1973
	    <files>
2061
	    <files>
2062
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
1974
		<file>
2063
		<file>
1975
		    <url>http://ezine.daemonnews.org/200605/bsdcan_photos.html</url>
2064
		    <url>bsdtalk073.mp3</url>
1976
		    <tags>jpg</tags>
2065
		    <size>6 Mb</size>
2066
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
2067
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2068
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2069
		</file>
2070
		<file>
2071
		    <url>bsdtalk073.ogg</url>
2072
		    <length>13 minutes</length>
2073
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2074
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
1977
		</file>
2075
		</file>
1978
	    </files>
2076
	    </files>
1979
	</item>
2077
	</item>
1980
2078
1981
	<!-- Source: New York City *BSD User Group
2079
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20061003">
1982
	-->
2080
	    <title>Interview with Poul-Henning Kamp about Varnish</title>
1983
2081
	    <desc>
1984
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070504">
2082
		 Interview with Poul-Henning Kamp about Varnish. More information at http://www.varnish-cache.org/.
1985
	    <title>Amitai Schlair on pkgsrcCon.</title>
2083
	    </desc>
1986
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2084
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/10/bsdtalk072-interview-with-poul-henning.html</overview>
1987
		<p>
2085
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,varnish,poul-henning kamp</tags>
1988
		The fourth annual <a
1989
		href="http://www.pkgsrccon.org/2007/">pkgsrcCon</a> is
1990
		April 27-29 in Barcelona. As might be expected when
1991
		brains congregate, pkgsrcCon traditionally results
1992
		in a flurry of activity toward new directions and
1993
		initiatives.  Mere hours after returning to New
1994
		York, Amitai will give us a recap of <a
1995
		href="http://www.pkgsrccon.org/2007/presentations.html">the
1996
		proceedings</a>, including his presentation,
1997
		"Packaging djbware."
1998
		</p>
1999
		<p>
2000
		<a href="http://www.schmonz.com/">Amitai Schlair</a>
2001
		is a pkgsrc developer who has worked in such diverse
2002
		areas as Mac OS X platform support and packages of
2003
		software by Dan Bernstein. His full-time undergraduate
2004
		studies at Columbia are another contributing factor
2005
		to his impending insanity. He consults in software
2006
		and IT.
2007
		</p>
2008
	    ]]></desc>
2009
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10102</overview>
2010
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,pkgsrccon,netbsd,amitai schlair</tags>
2011
	    <files>
2086
	    <files>
2012
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
2087
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2013
		<file>
2088
		<file>
2014
		    <url>nycbug-05-02-07.mp3</url>
2089
		    <url>bsdtalk072.mp3</url>
2090
		    <size>17 Mb</size>
2091
		    <length>36 minutes</length>
2015
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2092
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2016
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2093
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2017
		    <size>21Mb</size>
2094
		</file>
2095
		<file>
2096
		    <url>bsdtalk072.ogg</url>
2097
		    <length>36 minutes</length>
2098
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2099
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2018
		</file>
2100
		</file>
2019
	    </files>
2101
	    </files>
2020
	</item>
2102
	</item>
2021
2103
2022
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070406">
2104
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060929">
2023
	    <title>Ray Lai: on OpenCVS</title>
2105
	    <title>Interview with Einar Th. Einarsson from f-prot.com</title>
2024
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2106
	    <desc>
2025
		<p>
2107
		 Interview with Einar Th. Einarsson from f-prot.com.
2026
		This presentation was inspired by the recent
2108
	    </desc>
2027
		Subversion presentation. It will talk about the
2109
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk071-interview-with-einar-th.html</overview>
2028
		origins of OpenRCS and OpenCVS, its real-world usage
2110
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,f-prot,einar th einarsson</tags>
2029
		in the OpenBSD project, and why OpenBSD will continue
2030
		to use CVS.
2031
		</p>
2032
		<p>
2033
		Ray is an OpenBSD developer who uses Subversion by
2034
		day, CVS by night. Taking the phrase "complexity
2035
		is the enemy of security" to heart, he believes
2036
		that the beauty of UNIX`s security is in its
2037
		simplicity.
2038
		</p>
2039
	    ]]></desc>
2040
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10104</overview>
2041
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,cvs,openbsd,ray lai</tags>
2042
	    <files>
2111
	    <files>
2043
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
2112
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2044
		<file>
2113
		<file>
2045
		    <url>nycbug-04-04-07.mp3</url>
2114
		    <url>bsdtalk071.mp3</url>
2115
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
2116
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
2046
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2117
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2047
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2118
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2048
		</file>
2119
		</file>
2120
		<file>
2121
		    <url>bsdtalk071.ogg</url>
2122
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
2123
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2124
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2125
		</file>
2049
	    </files>
2126
	    </files>
2050
	</item>
2127
	</item>
2051
2128
2052
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070309">
2129
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060928">
2053
	    <title>Matthew Burnside: Integrated Enterprise Security Mgmt</title>
2130
	    <title>Interview with NetBSD Developer Tim Rightnour</title>
2054
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2131
	    <desc>
2055
		<p>
2132
		 Interview with NetBSD Developer Tim Rightnour. We talk about NetBSD/prep.
2056
		<b>Integrated Enterprise Security Management</b>
2133
	    </desc>
2057
		</p>
2134
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk070-interview-with-netbsd.html</overview>
2058
		<p>
2135
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,tim rightnour</tags>
2059
		Security policies are a key component in protecting
2060
		enterprise networks. But, while there are many
2061
		diverse defensive options available, current models
2062
		and mechanisms for mechanically-enforced security
2063
		policies are limited to traditional admission-based
2064
		access control. Defensive capabilities include among
2065
		others logging, firewalls, honeypots, rollback/recovery,
2066
		and intrusion detection systems, while policy
2067
		enforcement is essentially limited to one-off access
2068
		control. Furthermore, access-control mechanisms
2069
		operate independently on each service, which can
2070
		(and often does) lead to inconsistent or incorrect
2071
		application of the intended system-wide policy. We
2072
		propose a new scheme for global security policies.
2073
		Every policy decision is made with near-global
2074
		knowledge, and re-evaluated as global knowledge
2075
		changes. Using a variety of actuators, we make the
2076
		full array of defensive capabilities available to
2077
		the global policy. Our goal is a coherent,
2078
		enterprise-wide response to any network threat.
2079
		</p>
2080
		<p>
2081
		<b>Biography</b>
2082
		</p>
2083
		<p>
2084
		Matthew Burnside is a Ph.D. student in the Computer
2085
		Science department at Columbia University, in New
2086
		York. He works for Professor Angelos Keromytis in
2087
		the Network Security Lab. He received his B.A and
2088
		M.Eng from MIT in 2000, and 2002, respectively. His
2089
		main research interests are in computer security,
2090
		trust management, and network anonymity.
2091
		</p>
2092
	    ]]></desc>
2093
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10089</overview>
2094
	    <tags>mp3,presentation,enterprise security,matthew burnside</tags>
2095
	    <files>
2136
	    <files>
2096
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
2137
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2097
		<file>
2138
		<file>
2098
		    <url>nycbug-03-07-07.mp3</url>
2139
		    <url>bsdtalk070.mp3</url>
2140
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
2141
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
2099
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2142
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2100
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2143
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2101
		</file>
2144
		</file>
2145
		<file>
2146
		    <url>bsdtalk070.ogg</url>
2147
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
2148
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2149
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2150
		</file>
2102
	    </files>
2151
	    </files>
2103
	</item>
2152
	</item>
2104
2153
2105
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070209">
2154
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060923">
2106
	    <title>Ivan Ivanov on The Version Control System Subversion</title>
2155
	    <title>Interview with Christoph Egger about Xen on OpenBSD</title>
2107
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2156
	    <desc>
2108
		<p>
2157
		 Interview with Christoph Egger about Xen on OpenBSD.
2109
		The presentation will discuss Subversion from both
2158
	    </desc>
2110
		client and server points of view. It will show how
2159
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk069-interview-with-christoph.html</overview>
2111
		to create repositories and how to make them accessible
2160
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,xen,christoph egger</tags>
2112
		over the network using different access schemes
2113
		like http://, file:// or svn://. Pointers are given
2114
		on securing the repositories and on authenticating
2115
		and authorizing the clients.  Next, the presentation
2116
		shows how an user interacts with the repository and
2117
		describes some of the important Subversion client
2118
		commands.  Finally, it deals with administrating
2119
		the repository using "hook scripts".
2120
		</p>
2121
		<p>
2122
		Ivan Ivanov is generally interested in Version
2123
		Control Systems since his student years in Sofia
2124
		University, Bulgaria, where he set up and maintained
2125
		a CVS server for an academic project. When Subversion
2126
		became a fact and proved to be "a better CVS" he
2127
		researched it and last year deployed it for his
2128
		NYC-based employer Ariel Partners
2129
		(http://www.arielpartners.com/). He intergrated the
2130
		Subversion repositories with Apache Web Server over
2131
		https to enable a reliable and secure way to access
2132
		them from any point.
2133
		</p>
2134
	    ]]></desc>
2135
	    <overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</overview>
2136
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,subversion,ivan ivanov</tags>
2137
	    <files>
2161
	    <files>
2138
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
2162
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2139
		<file>
2163
		<file>
2140
		    <url>nycbug-02-07-07.mp3</url>
2164
		    <url>bsdtalk069.mp3</url>
2165
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
2166
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
2141
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2167
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2142
		    <tags>nycbug,presentation,subversion,ivan ivanov</tags>
2168
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2169
		</file>
2170
		<file>
2171
		    <url>bsdtalk069.ogg</url>
2172
		    <length>15 minutes</length>
2173
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2174
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2143
		</file>
2175
		</file>
2144
	    </files>
2176
	    </files>
2145
	</item>
2177
	</item>
2146
2178
2147
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070107">
2179
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060923">
2148
	    <title>Okan Demirmen on PF</title>
2180
	    <title>Interview with OpenBSD Developer Bob Beck</title>
2149
	    <desc>
2181
	    <desc>
2150
		We have had lots of meetings that have peripherally
2182
		 Interview with OpenBSD Developer Bob Beck.
2151
		discussed OpenBSD`s wildly popular PF firewall...
2152
		but finally we will have a meeting focused on it.
2153
	    </desc>
2183
	    </desc>
2154
	    <overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</overview>
2184
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk068-interview-with-openbsd.html</overview>
2155
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,openbsd,pf,okan demirmen</tags>
2185
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,openbsd,bob beck</tags>
2156
	    <files>
2186
	    <files>
2157
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
2187
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2158
		<file>
2188
		<file>
2159
		    <url>nycbug-01-03-07.mp3</url>
2189
		    <url>bsdtalk068.mp3</url>
2190
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
2191
		    <length>26 minutes</length>
2160
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2192
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2161
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2193
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2162
		</file>
2194
		</file>
2195
		<file>
2196
		    <url>bsdtalk068.ogg</url>
2197
		    <length>26 minutes</length>
2198
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2199
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2200
		</file>
2163
	    </files>
2201
	    </files>
2164
	</item>
2202
	</item>
2165
2203
2166
	<item source="nycbug" added="20061102">
2204
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060922">
2167
	    <title>New York City BSD Con 2006: BSD is Dying - A Cautionary Tale of Sex and Greed</title>
2205
	    <title>Interview with Dan Langille about backups</title>
2168
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2206
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2169
		<p>
2207
		 Interview with Dan Langille about backups. Check out <a href="http://www.bacula.org/">http://www.bacula.org/</a>
2170
		<b>BSD is Dying</b><br>
2171
		<b>A Cautionary Tale of Sex and Greed</b><br>
2172
		<b>Jason Dixon</b><br>
2173
		<b>October 28, 2006</b>
2174
		</p>
2175
		<p>
2176
		First and foremost, I would like to thank the unique
2177
		presentation styles of Dick Hardt and Lawrence
2178
		Lessig for inspiring me to create this presentation.
2179
		</p>
2180
		<p>
2181
		The following videos were created by exporting the
2182
		original Keynote presentation slides into QuickTime
2183
		video, then manually synchronizing them using iMovie
2184
		HD with the audio recordings captured by Nikolai
2185
		Fetissov. They were then exported into QuickTime,
2186
		mpeg4 (H.264/AAC), and iPod movie formats. If you
2187
		are having difficulties with the MP4 copy, and are
2188
		unable to view QuickTime movies, please contact me
2189
		and I'll try to assist.
2190
		</p>
2191
	    ]]></desc>
2208
	    ]]></desc>
2192
	    <overview>http://talks.dixongroup.net/nycbsdcon2006/</overview>
2209
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk067-interview-with-dan-langille.html</overview>
2193
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,humor,bsd is dying,jason dixon</tags>
2210
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,bacula,dan langille</tags>
2194
	    <files>
2211
	    <files>
2195
		<prefix>http://talks.dixongroup.net/nycbsdcon2006/</prefix>
2212
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2196
		<file>
2197
		    <url>BSD_is_Dying_640x480.mov</url>
2198
		    <size>19Mb</size>
2199
		    <desc>QuickTime</desc>
2200
		    <tags>mov</tags>
2201
		</file>
2202
		<file>
2213
		<file>
2203
		    <url>BSD_is_Dying_640x480.mp4</url>
2214
		    <url>bsdtalk067.mp3</url>
2204
		    <size>31Mb</size>
2215
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
2205
		    <desc>MP4</desc>
2216
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
2206
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
2217
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2218
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2207
		</file>
2219
		</file>
2208
		<file>
2220
		<file>
2209
		    <url>BSD_is_Dying_640x480.m4v</url>
2221
		    <url>bsdtalk067.ogg</url>
2210
		    <size>36Mb</size>
2222
		    <length>22 minutes</length>
2211
		    <desc>iPod</desc>
2223
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2212
		    <tags>m4v</tags>
2224
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2213
		</file>
2225
		</file>
2214
	    </files>
2226
	    </files>
2215
	</item>
2227
	</item>
2216
2228
2217
	<item source="nycbug" added="20061101">
2229
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060921">
2218
	    <title>New York City BSD Con 2006</title>
2230
	    <title>Interview with Michael Dexter about sysjail</title>
2219
	    <desc>
2231
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2220
		Audio recordings of presentations given at New York City BSD Conference 2006. Courtesy of nikolai at fetissov.org. The main page also has links to the slides.
2232
		 Interview with Michael Dexter about sysjail. <a href="http://sysjail.bsd.lv/">http://sysjail.bsd.lv/</a>
2221
	    </desc>
2233
	    ]]></desc>
2222
	    <overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbsdcon06/</overview>
2234
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk066-interview-with-michael.html</overview>
2223
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation</tags>
2235
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,sysjail,michael dexter</tags>
2224
	    <files>
2236
	    <files>
2225
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbsdcon06/</prefix>
2237
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2226
		<file>
2227
		    <url>1.1.mp3</url>
2228
		    <size>14 Mb</size>
2229
		    <desc>Corey Benninger: Security with Ruby on Rails in BSD</desc>
2230
		    <tags>mp3,ruby,ruby on rails,security,corey benninger</tags>
2231
		</file>
2232
		<file>
2238
		<file>
2233
		    <url>1.2.mp3</url>
2239
		    <url>bsdtalk066.mp3</url>
2234
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
2240
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
2235
		    <desc>Brian A. Seklecki: A Framework for NetBSD Network Appliances.</desc>
2241
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
2236
		    <tags>mp3,netbsd,brian a seklecki</tags>
2242
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2243
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2237
		</file>
2244
		</file>
2238
		<file>
2245
		<file>
2239
		    <url>1.3.mp3</url>
2246
		    <url>bsdtalk066.ogg</url>
2240
		    <size>15 Mb</size>
2247
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
2241
		    <desc>Bob Beck: PF, it is not just for firewalls anymore.</desc>
2248
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2242
		    <tags>mp3,pf,bob beck</tags>
2249
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2243
		</file>
2250
		</file>
2251
	    </files>
2252
	</item>
2253
2254
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060915">
2255
	    <title><![CDATA[ Interview with Eirik &Oslash;verby.]]></title>
2256
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2257
		Interview with Eirik &Oslash;verby. We talk about
2258
		his use of BSD and Jails.
2259
	    ]]></desc>
2260
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk065-interview-with-eirik-verby.html</overview>
2261
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,jails,eirik Overby</tags>
2262
	    <files>
2263
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2244
		<file>
2264
		<file>
2245
		    <url>1.4.mp3</url>
2265
		    <url>bsdtalk065.mp3</url>
2246
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
2266
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
2247
		    <desc>Bjorn Nelson: A Build System for FreeBSD</desc>
2267
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
2248
		    <tags>mp3,freebsd,bjorn nelson</tags>
2268
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2249
		</file>
2269
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2250
		<file>
2251
		    <url>1.5.mp3</url>
2252
		    <size>13 Mb</size>
2253
		    <desc>Johnny C. Lam: The "hidden dependency" problem.</desc>
2254
		    <tags>mp3,johnny c lam</tags>
2255
		</file>
2270
		</file>
2256
		<file>
2271
		<file>
2257
		    <url>1.6.mp3</url>
2272
		    <url>bsdtalk065.ogg</url>
2273
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
2274
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2275
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2276
		</file>
2277
	    </files>
2278
	</item>
2279
2280
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060913">
2281
	    <title>Interview with NetBSD Developer Jason Thorpe</title>
2282
	    <desc>
2283
		 Interview with NetBSD Developer Jason Thorpe
2284
	    </desc>
2285
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/09/bsdtalk064-interview-with-netbsd.html</overview>
2286
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,netbsd,jason thorpe</tags>
2287
	    <files>
2288
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2289
		<file>
2290
		    <url>bsdtalk064.mp3</url>
2291
		    <size>18 Mb</size>
2292
		    <length>38 minutes</length>
2293
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2294
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2295
		</file>
2296
		<file>
2297
		    <url>bsdtalk064.ogg</url>
2298
		    <length>38 minutes</length>
2299
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2300
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2301
		</file>
2302
	    </files>
2303
	</item>
2304
2305
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060901">
2306
	    <title>Interview with Mitchell Smith about BSD and Accessibility</title>
2307
	    <desc>
2308
		 Interview with Mitchell Smith about BSD and Accessibility.
2309
	    </desc>
2310
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk063-interview-with-mitchell.html</overview>
2311
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,accessibility,mitchell smith</tags>
2312
	    <files>
2313
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2314
		<file>
2315
		    <url>bsdtalk063.mp3</url>
2316
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
2317
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
2318
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2319
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2320
		</file>
2321
		<file>
2322
		    <url>bsdtalk063.ogg</url>
2323
		    <length>17 minutes</length>
2324
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2325
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2326
		</file>
2327
	    </files>
2328
	</item>
2329
2330
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060822">
2331
	    <title>Interview with YAWS developer Claes Klacke Wikstrom</title>
2332
	    <desc>
2333
		 Interview with YAWS developer Claes "Klacke" Wikstrom.
2334
	    </desc>
2335
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk062-interview-with-yaws.html</overview>
2336
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,yaws,claes wikstrom</tags>
2337
	    <files>
2338
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2339
		<file>
2340
		    <url>bsdtalk062.mp3</url>
2341
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
2342
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
2343
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2344
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2345
		</file>
2346
		<file>
2347
		    <url>bsdtalk062.ogg</url>
2348
		    <length>18 minutes</length>
2349
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2350
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2351
		</file>
2352
	    </files>
2353
	</item>
2354
2355
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060815">
2356
	    <title>Interview with lighttpd developer Jan Kneschke</title>
2357
	    <desc>
2358
		 Interview with lighttpd developer Jan Kneschke.
2359
	    </desc>
2360
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk061-interview-with-lighttpd.html</overview>
2361
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,lighttpd,jan kneschke</tags>
2362
	    <files>
2363
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2364
		<file>
2365
		    <url>bsdtalk061.mp3</url>
2366
		    <size>17 Mb</size>
2367
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
2368
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2369
		    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,lighttpd,jan kneschke</tags>
2370
		</file>
2371
		<file>
2372
		    <url>bsdtalk061.ogg</url>
2373
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
2374
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2375
		    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,lighttpd,jan kneschke</tags>
2376
		</file>
2377
	    </files>
2378
	</item>
2379
2380
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060811">
2381
	    <title>My BSD History</title>
2382
	    <desc>
2383
		 My BSD History, by Will Backman of BSDTalk, and a bit on accessibility.
2384
	    </desc>
2385
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk060-my-bsd-history.html</overview>
2386
	    <tags>bsdtalk,accessibility</tags>
2387
	    <files>
2388
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2389
		<file>
2390
		    <url>bsdtalk060.mp3</url>
2391
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
2392
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
2393
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2394
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2395
		</file>
2396
		<file>
2397
		    <url>bsdtalk060.ogg</url>
2398
		    <length>10 minutes</length>
2399
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2400
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2401
		</file>
2402
	    </files>
2403
	</item>
2404
2405
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060808">
2406
	    <title>Interview with Matt Morley</title>
2407
	    <desc>
2408
		 Interview with Matt Morley, BSD user.
2409
	    </desc>
2410
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/08/bsdtalk059-interview-with-matt-morley.html</overview>
2411
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,matt morley</tags>
2412
	    <files>
2413
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2414
		<file>
2415
		    <url>bsdtalk059.mp3</url>
2258
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
2416
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
2259
		    <desc>Marco Peereboom: Bio &amp; Sensors in OpenBSD.</desc>
2417
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
2260
		    <tags>mp3,openbsd,sensors,marco peerenboom</tags>
2418
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2419
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2420
		</file>
2421
		<file>
2422
		    <url>bsdtalk059.ogg</url>
2423
		    <length>25 minutes</length>
2424
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2425
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2426
		</file>
2427
	    </files>
2428
	</item>
2429
2430
	<item source="bsdtalk" added="20060805">
2431
	    <title>Interview with Jason Thaxter from gomoos.org</title>
2432
	    <desc>
2433
		  Interview with Jason Thaxter from gomoos.org.
2434
	    </desc>
2435
	    <overview>http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2006/07/bsdtalk058-interview-with-jason.html</overview>
2436
	    <tags>bsdtalk,interview,gomoos,jason thaxter</tags>
2437
	    <files>
2438
		<prefix>http://cisx1.uma.maine.edu/~wbackman/bsdtalk/</prefix>
2439
		<file>
2440
		    <url>bsdtalk058.mp3</url>
2441
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
2442
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
2443
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2444
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2445
		</file>
2446
		<file>
2447
		    <url>bsdtalk058.ogg</url>
2448
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
2449
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
2450
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
2451
		</file>
2452
	    </files>
2453
	</item>
2454
2455
	<!-- Source: ukuug
2456
	-->
2457
2458
	<item source="ukuug" added="20070402">
2459
	    <title>Lousy virtualization, Happy users: FreeBSD's jail(2) facility</title>
2460
	    <desc>
2461
		Lousy virtualization, Happy users: FreeBSD's jail(2) facility by Poul-Henning Kamp (phk@FreeBSD.org)
2462
	    </desc>
2463
	    <overview>http://www.ukuug.org/events/spring2007/programme/</overview>
2464
	    <tags>ukuug,presentation,freebsd,jails,poul-henning kamp</tags>
2465
	    <files>
2466
		<file>
2467
		    <url>http://www.ukuug.org/events/spring2007/programme/jails.pdf</url>
2468
		    <size>2.7 Mb</size>
2469
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
2470
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2471
		</file>
2472
	    </files>
2473
	</item>
2474
2475
	<!-- Source: suug2004
2476
	-->
2477
2478
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
2479
	    <title>Poul-Henning Kamp - GBDE -- Spook strength disk encryption</title>
2480
	    <desc>
2481
		GBDE is a disk encryption facility designed with
2482
		both usability and strength as requirements and it
2483
		attempts to protect both the user and the data. The
2484
		talk is about avoiding self-deceiving analysis, how
2485
		to make real world usable cryptography and generally
2486
		protect yourself and your data. Required skill
2487
		level: Laptop user.
2488
	    </desc>
2489
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
2490
	    <tags>suug,presentation,gbde,poul-henning kamp</tags>
2491
	    <files>
2492
		<file>
2493
		    <url>http://phk.freebsd.dk/pubs/bsdcon-03.gbde.paper.pdf</url>
2494
		    <size>104 Kb</size>
2495
		    <desc>Paper</desc>
2496
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2497
		</file>
2498
		<file>
2499
		    <url>http://www.suug.ch/sucon/04/slides/gbde.pdf</url>
2500
		    <size>113 Kb</size>
2501
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
2502
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2503
		</file>
2504
	    </files>
2505
	</item>
2506
2507
2508
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
2509
	    <title>Hendrik Scholz - Performance bottleneck detection and removal</title>
2510
	    <desc>
2511
		Once a system is exposed to heavy load bottlenecks
2512
		need to be addressed to prevent single components
2513
		from slowing down a complex installation. Highlighting
2514
		various hotspots their detection and removal gets
2515
		discussed using real life examples.
2516
	    </desc>
2517
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
2518
	    <tags>suug,presentation,performance,hendrik scholz</tags>
2519
	    <files>
2520
		<file>
2521
		    <url>http://www.wormulon.net/files/pub/FreeBSD_Bottleneck_Detection.pdf</url>
2522
		    <size>213 Kb</size>
2523
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
2524
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2525
		</file>
2526
	    </files>
2527
	</item>
2528
2529
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
2530
	    <title>Max Laier - PF - Extended Introduction</title>
2531
	    <desc>
2532
		The talk will introduce packet filter (pf) - a *BSD
2533
		firewall system - and summarize its history and
2534
		projected future. After providing a short overview
2535
		of pf's general functionality and some firewall
2536
		basics, it will concentrate on packet filter's
2537
		advanced feature-set from the administrator's point
2538
		of view. The talk will also cover the integration
2539
		of ALTQ, a mature framework for traffic shaping and
2540
		priorization. Finally it will provide a short
2541
		overview of the "Common Address Redundancy Protocol"
2542
		(CARP) and its integration in pf.
2543
	    </desc>
2544
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
2545
	    <tags>suug,presentation,pf,altq,max laier</tags>
2546
	    <files>
2547
		<file>
2548
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~mlaier/sucon.pdf</url>
2549
		    <size>1 Mb</size>
2550
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
2551
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2552
		</file>
2553
		<file>
2554
		    <url>http://mirror.switch.ch/sucon-04/max_laier-pf_extended_introduction.avi</url>
2555
		    <size>94 Mb</size>
2556
		    <desc>Video/MPEG</desc>
2557
		    <tags>avi</tags>
2558
		</file>
2559
		<file>
2560
		    <url>http://mirror.switch.ch/sucon-04/max_laier-pf_extended_introduction.mp3</url>
2561
		    <size>22 Mb</size>
2562
		    <desc>Audio/MP3</desc>
2563
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2564
		</file>
2565
	    </files>
2566
	</item>
2567
2568
	<item source="suug2004" added="20070114">
2569
	    <title>Poul-Henning Kamp - Old mistakes repeated (but you do get the source code now)</title>
2570
	    <desc>
2571
		UNIX is the best operating system ever designed so
2572
		everybody is running UNIX on their computer, right
2573
		? This presentation takes a partisan looks a why
2574
		UNIX never became a big success in the eighties,
2575
		failed to win the market in the nineties, and still
2576
		struggles in the market in the new millenium.
2577
		Poul-Henning will take a critical look at the
2578
		mistakes of the past and the mistakes of the present
2579
		and try to make it really clear what needs to happen
2580
		for UNIX to become a real success.
2581
	    </desc>
2582
	    <overview>http://conferences.suug.ch/sucon/04/</overview>
2583
	    <tags>suug,presentation,unix,mistakes,poul-henning kamp</tags>
2584
	    <files>
2585
		<file>
2586
		    <url>http://www.suug.ch/sucon/04/slides/oldmistakes.pdf</url>
2587
		    <size>65 Kb</size>
2588
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
2589
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2590
		</file>
2591
	    </files>
2592
	</item>
2593
2594
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20071010">
2595
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2007 Videos</title>
2596
	    <overview>http://misc.allbsd.de/Vortrag/EuroBSDCon_2007/</overview>
2597
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2007 Papers</desc>
2598
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2007,videos</tags>
2599
	    <files>
2600
		<prefix>http://video.eurobsdcon.dk/2007/</prefix>
2601
		<file>
2602
		    <url>AnttiKanteeAndAlistairCrooks.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2603
		    <desc>Antti Kantee - ReFUSE: Userspace FUSE Reimplementation Using puffs</desc>
2604
		    <size>197 Mb</size>
2605
		    <tags>avi,refuse,antti kantee</tags>
2606
		</file>
2607
		<file>
2608
		    <url>BrooksDavis.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2609
		    <desc>Brooks Davis - Using FreeBSD to Promote Open Source Development Methods</desc>
2610
		    <size>92 Mb</size>
2611
		    <tags>avi,promotion,freebsd,brooks davis</tags>
2612
		</file>
2613
		<file>
2614
		    <url>ClaudioJeker.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2615
		    <desc>Claudio Jeker - Routing on OpenBSD</desc>
2616
		    <size>394 Mb</size>
2617
		    <tags>avi,routing,openbsd,claudio jeker</tags>
2618
		</file>
2619
		<file>
2620
		    <url>GeorgeNeville-Neil.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2621
		    <desc>George Neville-Neil - Network Protocol Testing in FreeBSD and in General</desc>
2622
		    <size>271 Kb</size>
2623
		    <tags>avi,network testing,freebsd,george neville-neil</tags>
2624
		</file>
2625
		<file>
2626
		    <url>IsaacLevy.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2627
		    <desc>Isaac Levy - FreeBSD jail(8) Overview, the Secure Virtual Server</desc>
2628
		    <size>350 Mb</size>
2629
		    <tags>avi,freebsd,isaac levy</tags>
2630
		</file>
2631
		<file>
2632
		    <url>JohnHartmann.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2633
		    <desc>John P Hartmann - Real Men's Pipes - When UNIX meets the mainframe mindset</desc>
2634
		    <size>315 Mb</size>
2635
		    <tags>avi,pipes,unix,mainframes,john p hartmann</tags>
2636
		</file>
2637
		<file>
2638
		    <url>MarshallKirkMcKusick.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2639
		    <desc>Kirk Mckusick - A Brief History of the BSD Fast Filesystem</desc>
2640
		    <size>251 Mb</size>
2641
		    <tags>avi,fast file system,kirk mckusick</tags>
2642
		</file>
2643
		<file>
2644
		    <url>PawelJakubDawidek.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2645
		    <desc>Pawel Jakub - FreeBSD/ZFS - last word in operating/file systems</desc>
2646
		    <size>203 Mb</size>
2647
		    <tags>avi,zfs,freebsd,pawel jakub</tags>
2648
		</file>
2649
		<file>
2650
		    <url>Pierre-YvesRitschard.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2651
		    <desc>Pierre Yves Ritschard - Load Balancing</desc>
2652
		    <size>219 Mb</size>
2653
		    <tags>avi,load balancing,pierre yves ritschard</tags>
2654
		</file>
2655
		<file>
2656
		    <url>RobertWatson.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2657
		    <desc>Robert Watson - FreeBSD Advanced Security Features</desc>
2658
		    <size>200 Mb</size>
2659
		    <tags>avi,security,freebsd,robert watson</tags>
2660
		</file>
2661
		<file>
2662
		    <url>RyanBickhart.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2663
		    <desc>Ryan Bickhart - Transparent TCP-to-SCTP Translation Shim Layer</desc>
2664
		    <size>376 Mb</size>
2665
		    <tags>avi,tcp-to-sctp,freebsd,ryan bickhart</tags>
2666
		</file>
2667
		<file>
2668
		    <url>SorenStraarup.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2669
		    <desc>Soren Straarup - An ARM from shoulder to hand</desc>
2670
		    <size>141 Mb</size>
2671
		    <tags>avi,arm,soren straarup</tags>
2672
		</file>
2673
		<file>
2674
		    <url>Sam-eurobsdcon-large.mov</url>
2675
		    <desc>Sam Leffler - Long Distance Wireless (for Emerging Regions)</desc>
2676
		    <size>248 Mb</size>
2677
		    <tags>mov,sam leffler</tags>
2678
		</file>
2679
		<file>
2680
		    <url>SamSmith.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2681
		    <desc>Sam Smith - Fighting "Technical fires"</desc>
2682
		    <size>147 Mb</size>
2683
		    <tags>avi,sam smith</tags>
2684
		</file>
2685
		<file>
2686
		    <url>SimonLNielsen.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2687
		    <desc>Simon L Nielsen - The FreeBSD Security Officer function</desc>
2688
		    <size>195 Kb</size>
2689
		    <tags>avi,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
2690
		</file>
2691
		<file>
2692
		    <url>StephenBorrill.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2693
		    <desc>Stephen Borrill - Building products with NetBSD - thin-clients</desc>
2694
		    <size>364 Mb</size>
2695
		    <tags>avi,netbsd,thin clients,stephen borrill</tags>
2696
		</file>
2697
		<file>
2698
		    <url>StevenMurdoch.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2699
		    <desc>Steven Murdoch - Hot or Not: Fingerprinting hosts through clock skew</desc>
2700
		    <size>235 Mb</size>
2701
		    <tags>avi,finger printing,clocks,Steven Murdoch</tags>
2702
		</file>
2703
		<file>
2704
		    <url>YvanVanhullebus.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2705
		    <desc>Yvan VanHullebus - NETASQ and BSD: a success story</desc>
2706
		    <size>382 Mb</size>
2707
		    <tags>avi,netasq,yvan vanhullebus</tags>
2708
		</file>
2709
		<file>
2710
		    <url>GregersPetersen.EuroBSDCon.2007.avi</url>
2711
		    <desc>Gregers Petersen - Open Source - is it something new?</desc>
2712
		    <size>285 Mb</size>
2713
		    <tags>avi,open source,gregers petersen</tags>
2714
		</file>
2715
	    </files>
2716
	</item>
2717
2718
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20071005">
2719
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2007 Papers</title>
2720
	    <overview>http://2007.eurobsdcon.org/presentations/</overview>
2721
	    <!-- overview>http://misc.allbsd.de/Vortrag/EuroBSDCon_2007/</overview -->
2722
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2007 Papers</desc>
2723
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2007,papers</tags>
2724
	    <files>
2725
		<prefix>http://misc.allbsd.de/Vortrag/EuroBSDCon_2007/</prefix>
2726
		<file>
2727
		    <url>Antti_Kantee/refuse.pdf</url>
2728
		    <desc>Antti Kantee - ReFUSE: Userspace FUSE Reimplementation Using puffs</desc>
2729
		    <size>102 Kb</size>
2730
		    <tags>pdf,refuse,antti kantee</tags>
2731
		</file>
2732
		<file>
2733
		    <url>Brooks_Davis/davis-eurobsdcon2007.pdf</url>
2734
		    <desc>Brooks Davis - Using FreeBSD to Promote Open Source Development Methods</desc>
2735
		    <size>989 Kb</size>
2736
		    <tags>pdf,promotion,freebsd,brooks davis</tags>
2737
		</file>
2738
		<file>
2739
		    <url>Brooks_Davis/eurobsdcon2007-cluster-tutorial.pdf</url>
2740
		    <desc>Brooks Davis - Building clusters with FreeBSD</desc>
2741
		    <size>2.2 Mb</size>
2742
		    <tags>pdf,clusters,freebsd,brooks davis</tags>
2743
		</file>
2744
		<file>
2745
		    <url>Claudio_Jeker/routing_on_openbsd.tar</url>
2746
		    <desc>Claudio Jeker - Routing on OpenBSD</desc>
2747
		    <size>1.3 Mb</size>
2748
		    <tags>tar,routing,openbsd,claudio jeker</tags>
2749
		</file>
2750
		<file>
2751
		    <url>George_Neville-Neil/EuroBSD2007.pdf</url>
2752
		    <desc>George Neville-Neil - Network Protocol Testing in FreeBSD and in General</desc>
2753
		    <size>251 Kb</size>
2754
		    <tags>pdf,network testing,freebsd,george neville-neil</tags>
2755
		</file>
2756
		<file>
2757
		    <url>Isaac_Levy/ike-jail-with_SRC.tbz</url>
2758
		    <desc>Isaac Levy - FreeBSD jail(8) Overview, the Secure Virtual Server</desc>
2759
		    <size>120 Mb</size>
2760
		    <tags>jail,freebsd,isaac levy</tags>
2761
		</file>
2762
		<file>
2763
		    <url>John_P_Hartmann/fbsd2007.odp</url>
2764
		    <desc>John P Hartmann - Real Men's Pipes - When UNIX meets the mainframe mindset</desc>
2765
		    <size>382 Kb</size>
2766
		    <tags>odp,pipes,unix,mainframes,john p hartmann</tags>
2767
		</file>
2768
		<file>
2769
		    <url>John_P_Hartmann/pipjarg.pdf</url>
2770
		    <desc>John P Hartmann - CMS Pipelines Explained</desc>
2771
		    <size>118 Kb</size>
2772
		    <tags>pdf,cms pipes,john p hartmann</tags>
2773
		</file>
2774
		<file>
2775
		    <url>Kirk_Mckusick/talk.pdf</url>
2776
		    <desc>Kirk Mckusick - A Brief History of the BSD Fast Filesystem</desc>
2777
		    <size>145 Kb</size>
2778
		    <tags>pdf,fast file system,kirk mckusick</tags>
2779
		</file>
2780
		<file>
2781
		    <url>Marc_Balmer/radio_clocks.pdf</url>
2782
		    <desc>Marc Balmer - Supporting Radio Clocks in OpenBSD</desc>
2783
		    <size>304 Kb</size>
2784
		    <tags>pdf,radio clocks,openbsd,marc balmer</tags>
2785
		</file>
2786
		<file>
2787
		    <url>Marko_Zec/TUTORIAL.PDF</url>
2788
		    <desc>Marko Zec - Network stack virtualization for FreeBSD 7.0</desc>
2789
		    <size>401 Kb</size>
2790
		    <tags>pdf,network stack,virtualization,freebsd,marko zec</tags>
2791
		</file>
2792
		<file>
2793
		    <url>Pawel_Jakub_Dawidek/eurobsdcon07_zfs.pdf</url>
2794
		    <desc>Pawel Jakub - FreeBSD/ZFS - last word in operating/file systems</desc>
2795
		    <size>337 Kb</size>
2796
		    <tags>pdf,zfs,freebsd,pawel jakub</tags>
2797
		</file>
2798
		<file>
2799
		    <url>Peter_Hansteen/pf-firewall.pdf</url>
2800
		    <desc>Peter Hansteen - Firewalling with OpenBSD's PF packet filter</desc>
2801
		    <size>531 Kb</size>
2802
		    <tags>pdf,pf,openbsd,peter hansteen</tags>
2803
		</file>
2804
		<file>
2805
		    <url>Pierre_Yves_Ritschard/loadbalancin.tgz</url>
2806
		    <desc>Pierre Yves Ritschard - Load Balancing</desc>
2807
		    <size>23 Kb</size>
2808
		    <tags>html,load balancing,pierre yves ritschard</tags>
2809
		</file>
2810
		<file>
2811
		    <url>Robert_Watson/20070914-security-features.pdf</url>
2812
		    <desc>Robert Watson - FreeBSD Advanced Security Features</desc>
2813
		    <size>152 Kb</size>
2814
		    <tags>pdf,security,freebsd,robert watson</tags>
2815
		</file>
2816
		<file>
2817
		    <url>Ryan_Bickhart/Ryan_Bickhart.pdf</url>
2818
		    <desc>Ryan Bickhart - Transparent TCP-to-SCTP Translation Shim Layer</desc>
2819
		    <size>491 Kb</size>
2820
		    <tags>pdf,tcp-to-sctp,freebsd,ryan bickhart</tags>
2821
		</file>
2822
		<file>
2823
		    <url>Ryan_Bickhart/Ryan_Bickhart.ppt</url>
2824
		    <desc>Ryan Bickhart - Transparent TCP-to-SCTP Translation Shim Layer</desc>
2825
		    <size>692 Kb</size>
2826
		    <tags>ppt,tcp-to-sctp,freebsd,ryan bickhart</tags>
2827
		</file>
2828
		<file>
2829
		    <url>S%f8ren_Straarup/arm_from_hand_to_shoulder_eurobsdcon_2007.pdf</url>
2830
		    <desc>Soren Straarup - An ARM from shoulder to hand</desc>
2831
		    <size>307 Kb</size>
2832
		    <tags>pdf,arm,soren straarup</tags>
2833
		</file>
2834
		<file>
2835
		    <url>Sam_Leffler/EuroBSDCon2007.pdf</url>
2836
		    <desc>Sam Leffler - Long Distance Wireless (for Emerging Regions)</desc>
2837
		    <size>19 Mb</size>
2838
		    <tags>pdf,sam leffler</tags>
2839
		</file>
2840
		<file>
2841
		    <url>Sam_Smith/eurobsdcon-talk.pdf</url>
2842
		    <desc>Sam Smith - Fighting "Technical fires"</desc>
2843
		    <size>1.4 Mb</size>
2844
		    <tags>pdf,sam smith</tags>
2845
		</file>
2846
		<file>
2847
		    <url>Simon_L_Nielsen/freebsd-so-function-eurobsdcon-2007.pdf</url>
2848
		    <desc>Simon L Nielsen - The FreeBSD Security Officer function</desc>
2849
		    <size>251 Kb</size>
2850
		    <tags>pdf,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
2851
		</file>
2852
		<file>
2853
		    <url>Stephen_Borrill/eurobsdcon.pdf</url>
2854
		    <desc>Stephen Borrill - Building products with NetBSD - thin-clients</desc>
2855
		    <size>407 Kb</size>
2856
		    <tags>pdf,netbsd,thin clients,stephen borrill</tags>
2857
		</file>
2858
		<file>
2859
		    <url>Steven_Murdoch/eurobsdcon07hotornot.pdf</url>
2860
		    <desc>Steven Murdoch - Hot or Not: Fingerprinting hosts through clock skew</desc>
2861
		    <size>6.1 Mb</size>
2862
		    <tags>pdf,finger printing,clocks,Steven Murdoch</tags>
2863
		</file>
2864
		<file>
2865
		    <url>Yvan_VanHullebus/2007-09-15-NETASQ-BSD-pub.pdf</url>
2866
		    <desc>Yvan VanHullebus - NETASQ and BSD: a success story</desc>
2867
		    <size>2.4 Mb</size>
2868
		    <tags>pdf,netasq,yvan vanhullebus</tags>
2869
		</file>
2870
	    </files>
2871
	</item>
2872
2873
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20070926">
2874
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2007 Photos</title>
2875
	    <overview>http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/eurobsdcon2007/</overview>
2876
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2007 Photos by various people</desc>
2877
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2007,photos,flickr</tags>
2878
	    <files>
2879
		<file>
2880
		    <url>http://www.flickr.com/photos/edkikkert/sets/72157602007517635/</url>
2881
		    <desc>Ed Kikkert - EuroBSDCon 2007 taken place in Copenhagen, Denmark 14-15 September 2007 at the Symbion Science Park</desc>
2882
		    <tags>ed kikkert</tags>
2883
		</file>
2884
		<file>
2885
		    <url>http://www.flickr.com/photos/tom_snow/sets/72157602050540536/</url>
2886
		    <desc>Tom (Snow) - Foto's taken bij Tom and Robert of www.snow.nl</desc>
2887
		    <tags>tom snow</tags>
2888
		</file>
2889
		<file>
2890
		    <url>http://www.flickr.com/photos/rickvanderzwet/sets/72157602002839498/</url>
2891
		    <desc>Rick van der Zwet</desc>
2892
		    <tags>rick van der zwet</tags>
2893
		</file>
2894
		<file>
2895
		    <url>http://www.flickr.com/photos/13801854@N02/sets/72157602081330565/</url>
2896
		    <desc>Peternmhansteen</desc>
2897
		    <tags>peternmhansteen</tags>
2898
		</file>
2899
		<file>
2900
		    <url>http://www.flickr.com/photos/12884927@N07/sets/72157601996279923/</url>
2901
		    <desc>Eystein.aarseth - Photos from EuroBSDCon  in Copenhagen, Denmark, september 2007</desc>
2902
		    <tags>eystein aarseth</tags>
2903
		</file>
2904
	    </files>
2905
	</item>
2906
2907
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20070114">
2908
	    <title>Andre Opperman - The papers I write for EuroBSDCon 05</title>
2909
	    <desc>
2910
		The papers I write for EuroBSDCon 05 on New Networking
2911
		Feature in FreeBSD 6.0 and Optimizing FreeBSD IP
2912
		and TCP in 7-CURRENT
2913
	    </desc>
2914
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~andre/</overview>
2915
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2005,paper,freebsd,networking,andre opperman</tags>
2916
	    <files>
2917
		<prefix>http://people.freebsd.org/~andre/</prefix>
2918
		<file>
2919
		    <url>New%20Networking%20Features%20in%20FreeBSD%206.pdf</url>
2920
		    <size>92 Kb</size>
2921
		    <desc>New Networking Features in FreeBSD 6</desc>
2922
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2923
		</file>
2924
		<file>
2925
		    <url>Optimizing%20the%20FreeBSD%20IP%20and%20TCP%20Stack.pdf</url>
2926
		    <size>1 Mb</size>
2927
		    <desc>Optimizing the FreeBSD IP and TCP Stack</desc>
2928
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2929
		</file>
2930
	    </files>
2931
	</item>
2932
2933
	<item source="andreopperman" added="20070114">
2934
	    <title>The presentation I gave at SUCON 04</title>
2935
	    <desc>
2936
		The presentation I gave at SUCON 04 on 2nd September
2937
		2004 about enhancements/changes in FreeBSD 5.3
2938
		Networking Stack.
2939
	    </desc>
2940
	    <tags>sucon,presentation,freebsd,networking,andre opperman</tags>
2941
	    <files>
2942
		<file>
2943
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~andre/FreeBSD-5.3-Networking.pdf</url>
2944
		    <size>115 Kb</size>
2945
		    <desc>FreeBSD-5.3-Networking.pdf</desc>
2946
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2947
		</file>
2948
	    </files>
2949
	</item>
2950
2951
	<!-- Source: asiabsdcon
2952
	-->
2953
	<item source="asiabsdcon" added="20080422">
2954
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon 2008 Photos</title>
2955
	    <overview>http://www.paeps.cx/gallery/AsiaBSDCon_2008/index.html</overview>
2956
	    <desc>AsiaBSDCon 2008 Photos by Philip Paeps</desc>
2957
	    <tags>asiabsdcon,asiabsdcon2008,photos,philip paeps</tags>
2958
	</item>
2959
2960
	<item source="asiabsdcon" added="20080408">
2961
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon 2008 Paper List</title>
2962
	    <desc>
2963
		Papers of the AsiaBSDCon 2007
2964
	    </desc>
2965
	    <overview>http://2008.asiabsdcon.org/papers/</overview>
2966
	    <tags>asiabsdcon,asiabsdcon2008</tags>
2967
	    <files>
2968
		<prefix>http://2008.asiabsdcon.org/papers/</prefix>
2969
		<file>
2970
		    <url>abc2008-proc-cover.pdf</url>
2971
		    <size>467 Kb</size>
2972
		    <desc>Cover page</desc>
2973
		    <tags>pdf,paper,cover</tags>
2974
		</file>
2975
		<file>
2976
		    <url>abc2008-proc-all.pdf</url>
2977
		    <size>9.3 Mb</size>
2978
		    <desc>Whole of the proceedings</desc>
2979
		    <tags>pdf,paper</tags>
2980
		</file>
2981
		<file>
2982
		    <url>P1A-paper.pdf</url>
2983
		    <size>6.4 Mb</size>
2984
		    <desc>PC-BSD: FreeBSD on the Desktop, Matt Olander (iXsystems)</desc>
2985
		    <tags>pdf,paper,pc-bsd,freebsd,desktop,matt olander</tags>
2986
		</file>
2987
		<file>
2988
		    <url>P1B-paper.pdf</url>
2989
		    <size>94 Kb</size>
2990
		    <desc>Tracking FreeBSD in a Commercial Setting, M. Warner Losh (Cisco Systems, Inc.)</desc>
2991
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,warner losh</tags>
2992
		</file>
2993
		<file>
2994
		    <url>P3A-paper.pdf</url>
2995
		    <size>92 Kb</size>
2996
		    <desc>Gaols: Implementing Jails Under the kauth Framework, Christoph Badura (The NetBSD Foundation)</desc>
2997
		    <tags>pdf,paper,netbsd,jails,kauth,christoph badura</tags>
2998
		</file>
2999
		<file>
3000
		    <url>P3B-paper.pdf</url>
3001
		    <size>526 Kb</size>
3002
		    <desc>BSD implementations of XCAST6, Yuji IMAI, Takahiro KUROSAWA, Koichi SUZUKI, Eiichi MURAMOTO, Katsuomi HAMAJIMA, Hajimu UMEMOTO, and Nobuo KAWAGUTI (XCAST fan club, Japan)</desc>
3003
		    <tags>pdf,paper,bsd,xcast6,yuji imai,takahiro kurosawa,koichi suzuki,eiichi muramoto,katsuomi hamajima,hajimu umemoto,nobuo kawaguti</tags>
3004
		</file>
3005
		<file>
3006
		    <url>P4A-paper.pdf</url>
3007
		    <size>483 Kb</size>
3008
		    <desc>Using FreeBSD to Promote Open Source Development Methods, Brooks Davis, Michael AuYeung, Mark Thomas (The Aerospace Corporation)</desc>
3009
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,promotion,brooks david,michael auyeung,mark thomas</tags>
3010
		</file>
3011
		<file>
3012
		    <url>P4B-paper.pdf</url>
3013
		    <size>126 Kb</size>
3014
		    <desc>Send and Receive of File System Protocols: Userspace Approach With puffs, Antti Kantee (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland)</desc>
3015
		    <tags>pdf,paper,puffs,antti kantee</tags>
3016
		</file>
3017
		<file>
3018
		    <url>P5A-paper.pdf</url>
3019
		    <size>97 Kb</size>
3020
		    <desc>Logical Resource Isolation in the NetBSD Kernel, Kristaps Dzonsons (Centre for Parallel Computing, Swedish Royal Institute of Technology)  </desc>
3021
		    <tags>pdf,paper,netbsd,resources,kristaps dzonsons</tags>
3022
		</file>
3023
		<file>
3024
		    <url>P5B-paper.pdf</url>
3025
		    <size>91 Kb</size>
3026
		    <desc>GEOM --- in Infrastructure We Trust, Pawel Jakub Dawidek (The FreeBSD Project)  </desc>
3027
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,geom,pawel jakub dawidek</tags>
3028
		</file>
3029
		<file>
3030
		    <url>P6A-paper.pdf</url>
3031
		    <size>341 Kb</size>
3032
		    <desc>A Portable iSCSI Initiator, Alistair Crooks (The NetBSD Foundation)</desc>
3033
		    <tags>pdf,paper,netbsd,iscsi,alistair crooks</tags>
3034
		</file>
3035
		<file>
3036
		    <url>P8A-paper.pdf</url>
3037
		    <size>410 Kb</size>
3038
		    <desc>OpenBSD Network Stack Internals, Claudio Jeker (The OpenBSD Project)</desc>
3039
		    <tags>pdf,paper,openbsd,network stack,claudio jeker</tags>
3040
		</file>
3041
		<file>
3042
		    <url>P8B-paper.pdf</url>
3043
		    <size>72 Kb</size>
3044
		    <desc>Reducing Lock Contention in a Multi-Core System, Randall Stewart (Cisco Systems, Inc.)</desc>
3045
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,lock contention,smp,randall stewart</tags>
3046
		</file>
3047
		<file>
3048
		    <url>P9A-paper.pdf</url>
3049
		    <size>87 Kb</size>
3050
		    <desc>Sleeping Beauty --- NetBSD on Modern Laptops, Jorg Sonnenberger, Jared D. McNeill (The NetBSD Foundation)</desc>
3051
		    <tags>pdf,paper,netbsd,laptops,jorg sonnenberger,jared d mcneill</tags>
3052
		</file>
3053
	    </files>
3054
	</item>
3055
3056
	<item source="asiabsdcon" added="20070317">
3057
	    <title>AsiaBSDCon 2007 Paper/Slides List</title>
3058
	    <desc>
3059
		Slides and papers of the AsiaBSDCon 2007
3060
	    </desc>
3061
	    <overview>http://asiabsdcon.org/papers/</overview>
3062
	    <tags>asiabsdcon,asiabsdcon2007</tags>
3063
	    <files>
3064
		<prefix>http://asiabsdcon.org/papers/</prefix>
3065
		<file>
3066
		    <url>abc2007-proc-cover.pdf</url>
3067
		    <size>588 Kb</size>
3068
		    <desc>Cover page</desc>
3069
		    <tags>pdf,paper,cover</tags>
3070
		</file>
3071
		<file>
3072
		    <url>abc2007-proc-all.pdf</url>
3073
		    <size>6.5 Mb</size>
3074
		    <desc>Whole of the Proceedings</desc>
3075
		    <tags>pdf,paper</tags>
3076
		</file>
3077
		<file>
3078
		    <url>P01-paper.pdf</url>
3079
		    <size>412 Kb</size>
3080
		    <desc>A NetBSD-based IPv6 NEMO Mobile Router, Jean Lorchat, Koshiro Mitsuya, Romain Kuntz (Keio University, Japan) [paper]</desc>
3081
		    <tags>pdf,paper,netbsd,ipv6,nemo,jean lorchat,koshiro mitsuya,romain kuntz</tags>
3082
		</file>
3083
		<file>
3084
		    <url>P02-paper.pdf</url>
3085
		    <size>1371 Kb</size>
3086
		    <desc>Reflections on Building a High Performance Computing Cluster Using FreeBSD, Brooks Davis (The Aerospace Corporation/brooks at FreeBSD.org, USA) [paper]</desc>
3087
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,high performance computing,brooks davis</tags>
3088
		</file>
3089
		<file>
3090
		    <url>P03-paper.pdf</url>
3091
		    <size>86 Kb</size>
3092
		    <desc>Support for Radio Clocks in OpenBSD, Marc Balmer (mbalmer at openbsd.org, Switzerland) [paper]</desc>
3093
		    <tags>pdf,paper,openbsd,radio clocks,marc balmer</tags>
3094
		</file>
3095
		<file>
3096
		    <url>P04-paper.pdf</url>
3097
		    <size>68 Kb</size>
3098
		    <desc>puffs - Pass to Userspace Framework File System, Antti Kantee (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland) [paper]</desc>
3099
		    <tags>pdf,paper,puffs,antii kantee</tags>
3100
		</file>
3101
		<file>
3102
		    <url>P04-slides.pdf</url>
3103
		    <size>116 Kb</size>
3104
		    <desc>puffs - Pass to Userspace Framework File System, Antti Kantee (Helsinki University of Technology, Finland) [slides]</desc>
3105
		    <tags>pdf,slides,puffs,antii kantee</tags>
3106
		</file>
3107
		<file>
3108
		    <url>P05-paper.pdf</url>
3109
		    <size>140 Kb</size>
3110
		    <desc>An ISP Perspective, jail(8) Virtual Private Servers, Isaac Levy (NYC*BUG/LESMUUG, USA) [paper]</desc>
3111
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,jail,isp,isaac levy</tags>
3112
		</file>
3113
		<file>
3114
		    <url>P05-slides.pdf</url>
3115
		    <size>20 Mb</size>
3116
		    <desc>An ISP Perspective, jail(8) Virtual Private Servers, Isaac Levy (NYC*BUG/LESMUUG, USA) [slides]</desc>
3117
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd,jail,isp,isaac levy</tags>
3118
		</file>
3119
		<file>
3120
		    <url>P06-paper.pdf</url>
3121
		    <size>32 Kb</size>
3122
		    <desc>Nsswitch Development: Nss-modules and libc Separation and Caching, Michael A Bushkov (Southern Federal University/bushman at FreeBSD.org, Russia) [paper]</desc>
3123
		    <tags>pdf,paper,nsswitch,michael bushkov</tags>
3124
		</file>
3125
		<file>
3126
		    <url>P08-paper.pdf</url>
3127
		    <size>328 Kb</size>
3128
		    <desc>How the FreeBSD Project Works, Robert N M Watson (University of Cambridge/rwatson at FreeBSD.org, United Kingdom) [paper]</desc>
3129
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,freebsd project,robert watson</tags>
3130
		</file>
3131
		<file>
3132
		    <url>P10-paper.pdf</url>
3133
		    <size>311 Kb</size>
3134
		    <desc>SHISA: The Mobile IPv6/NEMO BS Stack Implementation Current Status, Keiichi Shima (Internet Initiative Japan Inc., Japan), Koshiro Mitsuya, Ryuji Wakikawa (Keio University, Japan), Tsuyoshi Momose (NEC Corporation, Japan), Keisuke Uehara (Keio University, Japan) [paper]</desc>
3135
		    <tags>pdf,paper,ipv6,nemo,keiichi shima,koshiro mitsuya,ryuji wakikawa,tsoyoshi momose,keisuke uehara</tags>
3136
		</file>
3137
		<file>
3138
		    <url>P11-slides.pdf</url>
3139
		    <size>601 Kb</size>
3140
		    <desc>Bluffs: BSD Logging Updated Fast File System, Stephan Uphoff (Yahoo!, Inc./ups at FreeBSD.org, USA) [slides]</desc>
3141
		    <tags>pdf,slides,bluffs,stephan uphoff</tags>
3142
		</file>
3143
		<file>
3144
		    <url>P12-paper.pdf</url>
3145
		    <size>1071 Kb</size>
3146
		    <desc>Implementation and Evaluation of the Dual Stack Mobile IPv6, Koshiro Mitsuya, Ryuji Wakikawa, Jun Murai (Keio University, Japan) [paper]</desc>
3147
		    <tags>pdf,paper,ipv6,koshiro mitsuya,ryuji wakikawa,jun murai</tags>
3148
		</file>
3149
		<file>
3150
		    <url>P15-paper.pdf</url>
3151
		    <size>97 Kb</size>
3152
		    <desc>Security Measures in OpenSSH, Damien Miller (djm at openbsd.org, Australia) [paper]</desc>
3153
		    <tags>pdf,paper,openssh,damien miller</tags>
3154
		</file>
3155
		<file>
3156
		    <url>P16-paper.pdf</url>
3157
		    <size>96 Kb</size>
3158
		    <desc>Porting the ZFS File System to the FreeBSD Operating System, Pawel Jakub Dawidek (pjd at FreeBSD.org, Poland) [paper]</desc>
3159
		    <tags>pdf,paper,freebsd,zfs,pawel jakub dawidek</tags>
3160
		</file>
3161
		<file>
3162
		    <url>P16-slides.pdf</url>
3163
		    <size>278 Kb</size>
3164
		    <desc>Porting the ZFS File System to the FreeBSD Operating System, Pawel Jakub Dawidek (pjd at FreeBSD.org, Poland) [slides]</desc>
3165
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd,zfs,pawel jakub dawidek</tags>
3166
		</file>
3167
	    </files>
3168
	</item>
3169
3170
	<!-- Source: robertwatson
3171
	-->
3172
3173
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3174
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from EuroBSDCon 2004</title>
3175
	    <desc>
3176
		Robert Watson will describe the design and application
3177
		of the TrustedBSD MAC Framework, a flexible kernel
3178
		security framework developed on FreeBSD, and recently
3179
		experimentally ported to Apple's Darwin operating
3180
		system. The MAC Framework permits loadable access
3181
		control kernel modules to be loaded, modifying the
3182
		security behavior of the operating system, including
3183
		SEBSD, a port of the SELinux FLASK/TE security model
3184
		to FreeBSD.
3185
	    </desc>
3186
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004eurobsdcon/</overview>
3187
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2004,slides,trustedbsd,freebsd,mac,robert watson</tags>
3188
	    <files>
3189
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004eurobsdcon/</prefix>
3190
		<file>
3191
		    <url>20041031-eurobsdcon-macframework.pdf</url>
3192
		    <size>270 Kb</size>
3193
		    <desc>TrustedBSD MAC Framework on FreeBSD and Darwin</desc>
3194
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3195
		</file>
3196
	    </files>
3197
	</item>
3198
3199
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3200
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from UKUUG LISA 2006</title>
3201
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3202
		UKUUG LISA 2006 took place in Durham, UK in March,
3203
		2006. On this page, you can find my slides from
3204
		this conference.
3205
		<br>
3206
		OpenBSM is a BSD-licensed implementation of Sun's
3207
		Basic Security Module (BSM) API and file format,
3208
		and is the foundation of the TrustedBSD audit
3209
		implementation for FreeBSD. This talk will cover
3210
		the requirements, design, and implementation of
3211
		audit support for FreeBSD. Security audit support
3212
		provides detailed logging of security-relevant
3213
		events, and meets the requirements of the CAPP
3214
		Common Criteria protection profile.
3215
	    ]]></desc>
3216
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006ukuuglisa/</overview>
3217
	    <tags>ukuug,slides,openbsm,trustedbsd,freebsd,robert watson</tags>
3218
	    <files>
3219
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006ukuuglisa/</prefix>
3220
		<file>
3221
		    <url>20060323-ukuug2006lisa-audit.pdf</url>
3222
		    <size>199 Kb</size>
3223
		    <desc>CAPP-Compliant Security Event Audit System for Mac OS X and FreeBSD (UKUUG LISA 2006).</desc>
3224
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3225
		</file>
3226
	    </files>
3227
	</item>
3228
3229
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3230
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from EuroBSDCon 2006 and FreeBSD Developer Summit</title>
3231
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3232
		EuroBSDCon 2006 took place in Milan, Italy, and not
3233
		only offered excellent food on a flexible schedule,
3234
		but also an interesting array of talks on work
3235
		spanning the BSD's. On this page, you can find my
3236
		slides from the FreeBSD developer summit and full
3237
		conference.
3238
		<br>
3239
		Status report on the TrustedBSD Project: introduction
3240
		and status regarding Audit, plus a TODO list;
3241
		introduction to the priv(9) work recently merged
3242
		to 7.x.
3243
		<br>
3244
		The FreeBSD Project is one of the oldest and most
3245
		successful open source operating system projects,
3246
		seeing wide deployment across the IT industry. From
3247
		the root name servers, to top tier ISPs, to core
3248
		router operating systems, to firewalls, to embedded
3249
		appliances, you can't use a networked computer for
3250
		ten minutes without using FreeBSD dozens of times.
3251
		Part of FreeBSD's reputation for quality and
3252
		reliability comes from the nature of its development
3253
		organization--driven by a hundreds of highly skilled
3254
		volunteers, from high school students to university
3255
		professors. And unlike most open source projects,
3256
		the FreeBSD Project has developers who have been
3257
		working on the same source base for over twenty
3258
		years. But how does this organization work? Who
3259
		pays the bandwidth bills, runs the web servers,
3260
		writes the documentation, writes the code, and calls
3261
		the shots? And how can developers in a dozen time
3262
		zones reach agreement on the time of day, let alone
3263
		a kernel architecture? This presentation will attempt
3264
		to provide, in 45 minutes, a brief if entertaining
3265
		snapshot into what makes FreeBSD run.
3266
	    ]]></desc>
3267
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006eurobsdcon/</overview>
3268
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2006,robert watson</tags>
3269
	    <files>
3270
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006eurobsdcon/</prefix>
3271
		<file>
3272
		    <url>20061110-devsummit-trustedbsd.pdf</url>
3273
		    <size>166 Kb</size>
3274
		    <desc>TrustedBSD presentation on Audit and priv(9) (Developer Summit)</desc>
3275
		    <tags>pdf,slides,trustedbsd,freebsd</tags>
3276
		</file>
3277
		<file>
3278
		    <url>20061111-eurobsdcon2006-how-freebsd-works.pdf</url>
3279
		    <size>4.4 Mb</size>
3280
		    <desc>How the FreeBSD Project Works (EuroBSDCon 2006 Full Conference)</desc>
3281
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd,freebsd project</tags>
3282
		</file>
3283
	    </files>
3284
	</item>
3285
3286
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3287
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from BSDCan 2006 and FreeBSD Developer Summit</title>
3288
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3289
		As usual, Dan Langille ran an excellent <a
3290
		href="http://www.bsdcan.org/">BSDCan conference</a>.
3291
		On this page, you can find my slides from the
3292
		developer summit and full conference, excluding the
3293
		contents of the WIPs, for which I don't have
3294
		permission to redistribute the slides.
3295
	    ]]></desc>
3296
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006bsdcan/</overview>
3297
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2006,notes,devsummit,robert watson</tags>
3298
	    <files>
3299
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2006bsdcan/</prefix>
3300
		<file>
3301
		    <url>20060511-devsummit-network-cabal-summary.pdf</url>
3302
		    <size>72 Kb</size>
3303
		    <desc>Notes from the 10 May 2006 Meeting of the Network Stack Cabal (Developer Summit)</desc>
3304
		    <tags>pdf,freebsd</tags>
3305
		</file>
3306
		<file>
3307
		    <url>20060511-devsummit-smpng-network-summary.pdf</url>
3308
		    <size>91 Kb</size>
3309
		    <desc>SMPng Network Stack Update (Developer Summit)</desc>
3310
		    <tags>pdf,smp</tags>
3311
		</file>
3312
		<file>
3313
		    <url>20060511-devsummit-trustedbsd-mac-framework-retrofit.pdf</url>
3314
		    <size>120 Kb</size>
3315
		    <desc>TrustedBSD Project Update (Developer Summit)</desc>
3316
		    <tags>pdf,trustedbsd</tags>
3317
		</file>
3318
		<file>
3319
		    <url>20060512-bsdcan2006-how-freebsd-works.pdf</url>
3320
		    <size>4.4 Mb Kb</size>
3321
		    <desc>How the FreeBSD Project Works (BSDCan 2006 Full Conference)</desc>
3322
		    <tags>pdf,freebsd,freebsd project</tags>
3323
		</file>
3324
	    </files>
3325
	</item>
3326
3327
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3328
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from EuroBSDCon 2005</title>
3329
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3330
		EuroBSDCon 2005 took place in Basel, Switzerland
3331
		in November, 2005. Due to an injury, I was unable
3332
		to attend the conference itself, and my talks were
3333
		presented in absentia by Poul-Henning Kamp and Ed
3334
		Maste, who have my greatest appreciation!
3335
		<br>
3336
		The FreeBSD SMPng Project has spent the past five
3337
		years redesigning and reimplementing SMP support
3338
		for the FreeBSD operating system, moving from a
3339
		Giant-locked kernel to a fine-grained locking
3340
		implementation with greater kernel threading and
3341
		parallelism. This paper introduces the FreeBSD SMPng
3342
		Project, its architectural goals and implementation
3343
		approach. It then explores the impact of SMPng on
3344
		the FreeBSD network stack, including strategies for
3345
		integrating SMP support into the network stack,
3346
		locking approaches, optimizations, and challenges.
3347
	    ]]></desc>
3348
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2005eurobsdcon/</overview>
3349
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2005,slides,freebsd,smp,robert watson,poul-henning kamp,ed maste</tags>
3350
	    <files>
3351
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2005eurobsdcon/</prefix>
3352
		<file>
3353
		    <url>eurobsdcon2005-netperf.pdf</url>
3354
		    <size>370 Kb</size>
3355
		    <desc>Introduction to Multithreading and Multiprocessing in the FreeBSD SMPng Network Stack</desc>
3356
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3357
		</file>
3358
	    </files>
3359
	</item>
3360
3361
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3362
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from BSDCan 2004</title>
3363
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3364
		BSDCan 2004 took place at the University of Ottawa
3365
		in Ottawa, Canada. On this page, you can find my
3366
		slides from the conference.
3367
		<br>
3368
		Robert Watson will describe a variety of pieces of
3369
		work done as part of the TrustedBSD Project, including
3370
		the TrustedBSD MAC Framework, Audit facilities for
3371
		FreeBSD, as well as supporting infrastructure work
3372
		such as GEOM/GBDE, UFS2, OpenPAM. He will also
3373
		discuss how certification and evaluation play into
3374
		feature selection, design, and documentation.
3375
	    ]]></desc>
3376
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004bsdcan/</overview>
3377
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2004,slides,trustedbsd,freebsd,robert watson</tags>
3378
	    <files>
3379
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004bsdcan/</prefix>
3380
		<file>
3381
		    <url>20040515-2004bsdcan-trustedbsd.pdf</url>
3382
		    <size>277 Kb</size>
3383
		    <desc>TrustedBSD: Trusted Operating System Features for BSD</desc>
3384
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3385
		</file>
3386
	    </files>
3387
	</item>
3388
3389
	<item source="robertwatson" added="20070114">
3390
	    <title>Robert Watson's Slides from AsiaBSDCon 2004</title>
3391
	    <desc>AsiaBSDCon 2004 took place in Taipei, Taiwan, in March 2004, and was hosted by Academia Sinica.</desc>
3392
	    <overview>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004asiabsdcon/</overview>
3393
	    <tags>asiabsdcon,asiabsdcon2004,robert watson</tags>
3394
	    <files>
3395
		<prefix>http://www.watson.org/~robert/freebsd/2004asiabsdcon/</prefix>
3396
		<file>
3397
		    <url>200403-asiabsdcon2004-trustedbsd.pdf</url>
3398
		    <size>135 Kb</size>
3399
		    <desc>Extensible Kernel Security through the TrustedBSD MAC Framework.</desc>
3400
		    <tags>pdf,slides,trustedbsd,mac</tags>
3401
		</file>
3402
		<file>
3403
		    <url>20040313-asiabsdcon04-bsdbof.pdf</url>
3404
		    <size>1.4 Mb</size>
3405
		    <desc>AsiaBSDCon 2004 BSD (FreeBSD) BoF session</desc>
3406
		    <tags>pdf,slides,freebsd</tags>
3407
		</file>
3408
	    </files>
3409
	</item>
3410
3411
	<!-- Source: dds
3412
	-->
3413
3414
	<item source="dds" added="20080517">
3415
	    <title>A Tale of Four Kernels</title>
3416
	    <desc>
3417
		The FreeBSD, GNU/Linux, Solaris, and Windows operating
3418
		systems have kernels that provide comparable
3419
		facilities. Interestingly, their code bases share
3420
		almost no common parts, while their development
3421
		processes vary dramatically. We analyze the source
3422
		code of the four systems by collecting metrics in
3423
		the areas of file organization, code structure,
3424
		code style, the use of the C preprocessor, and data
3425
		organization. The aggregate results indicate that
3426
		across various areas and many different metrics,
3427
		four systems developed using wildly different
3428
		processes score comparably. This allows us to posit
3429
		that the structure and internal quality attributes
3430
		of a working, non-trivial software artifact will
3431
		represent first and foremost the engineering
3432
		requirements of its construction, with the influence
3433
		of process being marginal, if any.
3434
	    </desc>
3435
	    <overview>http://www.spinellis.gr/pubs/</overview>
3436
	    <tags>freebsd,linux,solaris,windows,article,kernel,diomidis spinellis</tags>
3437
	    <files>
3438
		<prefix>http://www.spinellis.gr/pubs/</prefix>
3439
		<file>
3440
		    <url>conf/2008-ICSE-4kernel/html/Spi08b.html</url>
3441
		    <desc>
3442
			Diomidis Spinellis. A tale of four kernels.
3443
			In Wilhem Schfer, Matthew B. Dwyer, and
3444
			Volker Gruhn, editors, ICSE '08: Proceedings
3445
			of the 30th International Conference on
3446
			Software Engineering, pages 381-390, New
3447
			York, May 2008. Association for Computing
3448
			Machinery.
3449
		    </desc>
3450
		    <tags>html</tags>
3451
		</file>
3452
		<file>
3453
		    <url>conf/2008-ICSE-4kernel/html/Spi08b.pdf</url>
3454
		    <desc>
3455
			Diomidis Spinellis. A tale of four kernels.
3456
			In Wilhem Schfer, Matthew B. Dwyer, and
3457
			Volker Gruhn, editors, ICSE '08: Proceedings
3458
			of the 30th International Conference on
3459
			Software Engineering, pages 381-390, New
3460
			York, May 2008.  Association for Computing
3461
			Machinery.
3462
		    </desc>
3463
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3464
		</file>
3465
	    </files>
3466
	</item>
3467
3468
	<item source="dds" added="20070124">
3469
	    <title>Global software development in the FreeBSD project</title>
3470
	    <desc>
3471
		FreeBSD is a sophisticated operating system developed
3472
		and maintained as open-source software by a team
3473
		of more than 350 individuals located throughout the
3474
		world. This study uses developer location data, the
3475
		configuration management repository, and records
3476
		from the issue database to examine the extent of
3477
		global development and its effect on productivity,
3478
		quality, and developer cooperation. The key findings
3479
		are that global development allows round-the-clock
3480
		work, but there are some marked differences between
3481
		the type of work performed at different regions.
3482
		The effects of multiple dispersed developers on the
3483
		quality of code and productivity are negligible.
3484
		Mentoring appears to be sometimes associated with
3485
		developers living closer together, but ad-hoc
3486
		cooperation seems to work fine across continents.
3487
	    </desc>
3488
	    <overview>http://www.spinellis.gr/pubs/</overview>
3489
	    <tags>freebsd,article,global software development,domidis spinellis</tags>
3490
	    <files>
3491
		<prefix>http://www.spinellis.gr/pubs/</prefix>
3492
		<file>
3493
		    <url>conf/2006-GSD-FreeBSD/html/GSD-FreeBSD.html</url>
3494
		    <desc>International Workshop on Global Software Development for the Practitioner, pages 73-79. ACM Press, May 2006</desc>
3495
		    <tags>html</tags>
3496
		</file>
3497
		<file>
3498
		    <url>conf/2006-GSD-FreeBSD/html/GSD-FreeBSD-presentation.pdf</url>
3499
		    <desc>In NASSCOM Quality Summit 2006: Setting benchmarks in global outsourcing, Bangalore, India, September 2006. National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM).</desc>
3500
		    <tags>html</tags>
3501
		</file>
3502
		<file>
3503
		    <url>trade/2006-LinuxFormat-GSD/html/GSDEV.htm</url>
3504
		    <desc>Linux Format, (11):60?63, September/October 2006. In Greek.</desc>
3505
		    <tags>html</tags>
3506
		</file>
3507
	    </files>
3508
	</item>
3509
3510
	<!-- Source: daemonnews
3511
	-->
3512
3513
	<item source="daemonnews" added="20060524">
3514
	    <title>BSDCan 2006 Photos</title>
3515
	    <desc>BSDCan 2006 Photos by Diane Bruce</desc>
3516
	    <tags>daily deamon news,photos,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,diane bruce</tags>
3517
	    <files>
3518
		<file>
3519
		    <url>http://ezine.daemonnews.org/200605/bsdcan_photos.html</url>
3520
		    <tags>jpg</tags>
3521
		</file>
3522
	    </files>
3523
	</item>
3524
3525
	<!-- Source: New York City *BSD User Group
3526
	-->
3527
3528
	<item source="nycbug" added="20080512">
3529
	    <title>Managing OpenBSD Environments</title>
3530
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3531
		<p>
3532
		This talk is the result of an after-meeting discussion
3533
		with a few folks, when it became apparent that there
3534
		is some confusion as to how to deal with OpenBSD
3535
		in small and large environments. The topic of
3536
		installation and upgrading came up again. This talk
3537
		is aimed to hopefully dispel many of the rumors,
3538
		provide a thorough description and walk through of
3539
		the various stages of running OpenBSD in any size
3540
		environment, and some of the features and tools at
3541
		the administrator`s disposal.
3542
		</p><p>
3543
		Okan Demirmen has been working with UNIX-like systems
3544
		for as long as he can remember and has found OpenBSD
3545
		to match some of the same philosophies in which he
3546
		believes, namely simplicity and correctness, and
3547
		reap the benefits of such.
3548
		</p>
3549
	    ]]></desc>
3550
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10154</overview>
3551
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,openbsd,system management</tags>
3552
	    <files>
3553
		<file>
3554
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-05-07-08.mp3</url>
3555
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3556
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3557
		    <length>103 minutes</length>
3558
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
3559
		</file>
3560
	    </files>
3561
	</item>
3562
3563
	<item source="nycbug" added="20080322">
3564
	    <title>Building a High-Performance Computing Cluster Using FreeBSD</title>
3565
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3566
		<p>
3567
		<b>Special NYC*BUG meeting with FreeBSD developer Brooks Davis</b>
3568
		<br />
3569
		Since late 2000 we have developed and maintained a
3570
		general purpose technical and scientific computing
3571
		cluster running the FreeBSD operating system. In
3572
		that time we have grown from a cluster of 8 dual
3573
		Intel Pentium III systems to our current mix of 64
3574
		dual, quad-core Intel Xeon and 289 dual AMD Opteron
3575
		systems.
3576
		</p><p>
3577
		In this talk we reflect on the system architecture
3578
		as documented in our BSDCon 2003 paper "Building a
3579
		High-performance Computing Cluster Using FreeBSD"
3580
		and our changes since that time. After a brief
3581
		overview of the current cluster we revisit the
3582
		architectural decisions in that paper and reflect
3583
		on their long term success. We then discuss lessons
3584
		learned in the process. Finally, we conclude with
3585
		thoughts on future cluster expansion and designs.
3586
		</p><p>
3587
		<b>Bio</b>
3588
		<br />
3589
		Brooks Davis is an Engineering Specialist in the
3590
		High Performance Computing Section of the Computer
3591
		Systems Research Department at The Aerospace
3592
		Corporation. He has been a FreeBSD user since 1994,
3593
		a FreeBSD committer since 2001, and a core team
3594
		member since 2006. He earned a Bachelors Degree in
3595
		Computer Science from Harvey Mudd College in 1998.
3596
		</p><p>
3597
		His computing interests include high performance
3598
		computing, networking, security, mobility, and, of
3599
		course, finding ways to use FreeBSD in all these
3600
		areas. When not computing, he enjoys reading,
3601
		cooking, brewing and pounding on red-hot iron in
3602
		his garage blacksmith shop.
3603
		</p>
3604
	    ]]></desc>
3605
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10151</overview>
3606
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,high performance computing,freebsd,brooks davis</tags>
3607
	    <files>
3608
		<file>
3609
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-03-20-08.mp3</url>
3610
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3611
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3612
		    <length>80 minutes</length>
3613
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
3614
		</file>
3615
	    </files>
3616
	</item>
3617
3618
	<item source="nycbug" added="20080310">
3619
	    <title>User Interfaces and How People Think</title>
3620
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3621
		<p>
3622
		"User Interfaces and How People Think" will introduce
3623
		concepts of designing software for different users
3624
		by observing how they think about and do what they
3625
		do. While much of design today focuses on the
3626
		front-end of computer systems, there is opportunity
3627
		to innovate in every area where a human interacts
3628
		with software.
3629
		</p><p>
3630
		Bio:
3631
		Jeffery Mau is a user experience designer with the
3632
		leading business and technology consulting firm
3633
		Sapient. He has helped clients create great customer
3634
		experiences in the financial services, education,
3635
		entertainment and telecommunications industries.
3636
		With a passion for connecting people with technology,
3637
		Jeff specializes in Information Architecture and
3638
		Business Strategy. Jeff holds a Masters in Design
3639
		from the IIT Institute of Design in Chicago, Illinois.
3640
		</p>
3641
	    ]]></desc>
3642
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10152</overview>
3643
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,user interfaces</tags>
3644
	    <files>
3645
		<file>
3646
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-03-05-08.mp3</url>
3647
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3648
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3649
		    <length>78 minutes</length>
3650
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
3651
		</file>
3652
		<file>
3653
		    <url>http://www.nycbug.org/files/meeting_2008-03.pdf</url>
3654
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
3655
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3656
		    <length>24 pages</length>
3657
		    <size>2.7 Mb</size>
3658
		</file>
3659
	    </files>
3660
	</item>
3661
3662
	<item source="nycbug" added="20080219">
3663
	    <title>Open Meeting on OpenSSH</title>
3664
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3665
		<p>
3666
		Open Meeting on OpenSSH
3667
		</p><p>
3668
		Febrary's NYCBUG meeting is a broad look at OpenSSH,
3669
		the de facto method for remote administration and
3670
		more. OpenSSH celebrated its 8th anniversary this
3671
		past September, and we thought this would be a great
3672
		opportunity to discuss OpenSSH, and for others to
3673
		contribute their hacks and interesting applications.
3674
		</p>
3675
	    ]]></desc>
3676
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10150</overview>
3677
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,openssh</tags>
3678
	    <files>
3679
		<file>
3680
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-02-06-08.mp3</url>
3681
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3682
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3683
		    <length>63 minutes</length>
3684
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
3685
		</file>
3686
	    </files>
3687
	</item>
3688
3689
	<item source="nycbug" added="20080111">
3690
	    <title>SSARES</title>
3691
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3692
		<p>
3693
		SSARES: Secure Searchable Automated Remote Email
3694
		Storage - A usable, secure email system on a remote
3695
		untrusted server
3696
		</p><p>
3697
		The increasing centralization of networked services
3698
		places user data at considerable risk. For example,
3699
		many users store email on remote servers rather
3700
		than on their local disk. Doing so allows users to
3701
		gain the benefit of regular backups and remote
3702
		access, but it also places a great deal of unwarranted
3703
		trust in the server. Since most email is stored in
3704
		plaintext, a compromise of the server implies the
3705
		loss of confidentiality and integrity of the email
3706
		stored therein. Although users could employ an
3707
		end-to-end encryption scheme (e.g., PGP), such
3708
		measures are not widely adopted, require action on
3709
		the sender side, only provide partial protection
3710
		(the email headers remain in the clear), and prevent
3711
		the users from performing some common operations,
3712
		such as server-side search.
3713
		</p><p>
3714
		To address this problem, we present Secure Searchable
3715
		Automated Remote Email Storage (SSARES), a novel
3716
		system that offers a practical approach to both
3717
		securing remotely stored email and allowing
3718
		privacy-preserving search of that email collection.
3719
		Our solution encrypts email (the headers, body, and
3720
		attachments) as it arrives on the server using
3721
		public-key encryption. SSARES uses a combination
3722
		of Identity Based Encryption and Bloom Filters to
3723
		create a searchable index. This index reveals little
3724
		information about search keywords and queries, even
3725
		against adversaries that compromise the server.
3726
		SSARES remains largely transparent to both the
3727
		sender and recipient. However, the system also
3728
		incurs significant costs, primarily in terms of
3729
		expanded storage requirements. We view our work as
3730
		a starting point toward creating privacy-friendly
3731
		hosted services.
3732
		</p><p>
3733
		Angelos Keromytis is an Associate Professor with
3734
		the Department of Computer Science at Columbia
3735
		University, and director of the Network Security
3736
		Laboratory. He received his B.Sc. in Computer Science
3737
		from the University of Crete, Greece, and his M.Sc.
3738
		and Ph.D. from the Computer and Information Science
3739
		(CIS) Department, University of Pennsylvania. He
3740
		is the author and co-author of more than 100 papers
3741
		on refereed conferences and journals, and has served
3742
		on over 40 conference program committees. He is an
3743
		associate editor of the ACM Transactions on Information
3744
		and Systems Security (TISSEC). He recently co-authored
3745
		a book on using graphics cards for security, and
3746
		is a co-founder of StackSafe Inc. His current
3747
		research interests revolve around systems and network
3748
		security, and cryptography.
3749
		</p>
3750
	    ]]></desc>
3751
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10133</overview>
3752
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,ipv6,gene cronk</tags>
3753
	    <files>
3754
		<file>
3755
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-10-03-07.mp3</url>
3756
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3757
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3758
		    <length>67 minutes</length>
3759
		    <size>7 Mb</size>
3760
		</file>
3761
		<file>
3762
		    <url>http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~angelos/Papers/2007/SSARES_ACSAC.pdf</url>
3763
		    <desc>Paper</desc>
3764
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
3765
		    <length>10 pages</length>
3766
		    <size>443 Kb</size>
3767
		</file>
3768
	    </files>
3769
	</item>
3770
3771
	<item source="nycbug" added="20071006">
3772
	    <title>Gene Cronk on Implementing IPv6</title>
3773
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3774
		<p>
3775
		This talk will be on some of the basics of IPv6
3776
		including addressing, subnetting, and tools to test
3777
		connectivity. There will be a lab (network permitting),
3778
		and setups for an as of yet undisclosed flavor of
3779
		BSD as well as some of the well known daemons (Apache
3780
		2, SSHD) will be demonstrated. Setting up a BSD OS
3781
		as an IPv6 router and tunneling system will also
3782
		be covered.
3783
		</p><p>
3784
		<b>Bio</b><br>
3785
		Gene Cronk, CISSP-ISSAP, NSA-IAM is a freelance
3786
		network security consultant, specializing in *NIX
3787
		solutions. He has been working with computers for
3788
		well over 20 years, electronics for over 15, and
3789
		IPv6 specifically for 4 years. He has given talks
3790
		on IPv6 and a multitude of other topics at DefCon,
3791
		ShmooCon and other "underground" venues.
3792
		</p><p>
3793
		Gene is from Jacksonville, FL. When not involved
3794
		in matters concerning IPv6, he can be found gaming
3795
		(Anarchy Online), helping out with the <a
3796
		href="http://www.jaxlug.org/">Jacksonville Linux
3797
		User`s Group</a>, being one of the benevolent
3798
		dictators of the <a
3799
		href="http://www.hackerpimps.com/">Hacker Pimps
3800
		Security Think Tank</a>, or fixing up his house.
3801
		</p>
3802
	    ]]></desc>
3803
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10133</overview>
3804
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,ipv6,gene cronk</tags>
3805
	    <files>
3806
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
3807
		<file>
3808
		    <url>nycbug-10-03-07.mp3</url>
3809
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3810
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3811
		    <length>60 minutes</length>
3812
		    <size>14Mb</size>
3813
		</file>
3814
	    </files>
3815
	</item>
3816
3817
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070912">
3818
	    <title>Using Cryptography to Improve Web Application Performance and Security</title>
3819
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3820
		<p>
3821
		Cryptography has a reputation of slowing down
3822
		applications. However if done correctly, it can
3823
		actually be used to improve performance by storing
3824
		high-value/high-cost results "in public." In addition
3825
		the same techniques can solve common security
3826
		problems such as authorization, parameter scanning,
3827
		and parameter rewriting.
3828
		</p><p>
3829
		All are welcome - no previous experience with
3830
		cryptography is required, and the techniques will
3831
		be presented in a programming-language neutral
3832
		format.
3833
		</p><p>
3834
		Nick Galbreath have been working on high performance
3835
		servers and web security at various high profile
3836
		startups since 1994 (most recently Right Media).
3837
		He holds a Master degree of Mathematics from Boston
3838
		University, and published a book on cryptography.
3839
		He currently lives in the Lower East Side.
3840
		</p>
3841
	    ]]></desc>
3842
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10129</overview>
3843
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,cryptography,nick galbreath</tags>
3844
	    <files>
3845
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
3846
		<file>
3847
		    <url>nycbug-09-05-07.mp3</url>
3848
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3849
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3850
		    <size>18Mb</size>
3851
		</file>
3852
	    </files>
3853
	</item>
3854
3855
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070801">
3856
	    <title>Marc Spitzer on Nagios</title>
3857
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3858
		<p>
3859
		Nagios is a platform for monitoring services and
3860
		the hosts they reside on. It provides a reasonable
3861
		tool for monitoring your network and you can not
3862
		beat the price.
3863
		</p><p>
3864
		We plan on covering the following topics:
3865
		<ul>
3866
		<li>what it is
3867
		<li>how it works
3868
		<li>where to get it
3869
		<li>how to install it
3870
		<li>how to configure it
3871
		<li>how to customize it for your environment
3872
		<li>where the data is stored
3873
		<li>how to write a basic plug-in
3874
		</ul>
3875
		</p>
3876
		<p>
3877
		<b>About the Speaker</b><br>
3878
		Marc Spitzer started as a VAX/VMS operator who
3879
		taught himself some basic scripting in DCL to help
3880
		me remember how to do procedures that did not come
3881
		up enough to actually remember all the steps, this
3882
		was in 1990. Since then he has worked with HPUX,
3883
		Solaris, Windows, Linux, and the BSDs, FreeBSD being
3884
		his favorite. He has held a variety of positions,
3885
		admin and engineering, where he has been able to
3886
		introduce BSD into his work place. He currently
3887
		works for Columbia University as a Systems
3888
		Administrator.
3889
		</p><p>
3890
		He is a founding member of NYCBUG and LispNYC and
3891
		on the board of UNIGroup.
3892
		</p><p>
3893
		Most of his career has been building tools to solve
3894
		operational problems, with extra effort going to
3895
		the ones that irritated him personally. He takes a
3896
		great deal of pride in not needing a budget to solve
3897
		most problems.
3898
		</p>
3899
	    ]]></desc>
3900
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10122</overview>
3901
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,nagios,marc spitzer</tags>
3902
	    <files>
3903
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
3904
		<file>
3905
		    <url>nycbug-08-01-07.mp3</url>
3906
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3907
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3908
		    <size>19Mb</size>
3909
		</file>
3910
	    </files>
3911
	</item>
3912
3913
3914
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070708">
3915
	    <title>Isaac `Ike` Levy on the Real Unix Tradition</title>
3916
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3917
		<p>
3918
		"The Real Unix Tradition"
3919
		</p><p>
3920
		UNIX hackers, all standing on the shoulders of giants.
3921
		</p><p>
3922
		"...the number of UNIX installations has grown to
3923
		10, with more expected..." - Dennis Ritchie and Ken
3924
		Thompson, June 1972
3925
		</p><p>
3926
		"Well, it was all Open Source, before anybody really
3927
		called it that". - Brian Redman, 2003
3928
		</p><p>
3929
		UNIX is the oldest active and growing computing
3930
		culture alive today. From it`s humble roots in the
3931
		back room at Bell Laboratories, to today`s global
3932
		internet infrastructure- UNIX has consistently been
3933
		at the core of major advances in computing. Today,
3934
		the BSD legacy is the most direct continuation of
3935
		the most successful principles in UNIX, and continues
3936
		to lead major advances in computing.
3937
		</p><p>
3938
		Why? What`s so great about UNIX?
3939
		</p><p>
3940
		This lecture aims to prove that UNIX history is
3941
		surprisingly useful (and fun)- for developers,
3942
		sysadmins, and anyone working with BSD systems.
3943
		</p><p>
3944
		About the speaker<br>
3945
		Isaac Levy, (ike) is a freelance BSD hadker based
3946
		in NYC. He runs Diversaform Inc. as an engine to
3947
		make his hacking feed itself, (and ike). Diversaform
3948
		specializes in *BSD based solutions, providing `IT
3949
		special weapons and tatics` for various sized
3950
		business clients, as well as running a small
3951
		high-availability datacenter operation from lower
3952
		Manhattan. With regard to FreeBSD jail(8), ike was
3953
		a partner in the first jail (8)-based web hosting
3954
		ISP in America, iMeme, and has been developing
3955
		internet applications in and out of jails since
3956
		1999. Isaac is a proud member of NYC*BUG (the New
3957
		York City *BSD Users Group), and a long time member
3958
		of LESMUUG, (the Lower East Side Mac Unix Users
3959
		Group).
3960
		</p>
3961
	    ]]></desc>
3962
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10107</overview>
3963
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,unix tradition,isaac levy</tags>
3964
	    <files>
3965
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
3966
		<file>
3967
		    <url>nycbug-07-05-07.mp3</url>
3968
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
3969
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
3970
		    <size>10Mb</size>
3971
		</file>
3972
	    </files>
3973
	</item>
3974
3975
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070608">
3976
	    <title>Steven Kreuzer on Denial of Service Mitigation Techniques</title>
3977
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3978
		<p>
3979
		Protecting your servers, workstations and networks
3980
		can only go so far. Attacks which consume your
3981
		available Internet-facing bandwidth, or overpower
3982
		your CPU, can still take you offline. His presentation
3983
		will discuss techniques for mitigating the effects
3984
		of such attacks on servers designed to provide
3985
		network intensive services such as HTTP or routing.
3986
		</p><p>
3987
		About the speaker<br>
3988
		Steven Kreuzer is currently employed by Right Media
3989
		as a Systems Administrator focusing on building and
3990
		managing high transaction infrastructures around
3991
		the globe. He has been working with Open Source
3992
		technologies since as long as he can remember,
3993
		starting out with a 486 salvaged from a dumpster
3994
		behind his neighborhood computer store. In his spare
3995
		time he enjoys doing things with technology that
3996
		have absolutely no redeeming social value.
3997
		</p>
3998
	    ]]></desc>
3999
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10108</overview>
4000
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,denialofservice,steven kreuzer</tags>
4001
	    <files>
4002
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
4003
		<file>
4004
		    <url>nycbug-06-06-07.mp3</url>
4005
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4006
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4007
		    <size>10Mb</size>
4008
		</file>
4009
	    </files>
4010
	</item>
4011
4012
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070504">
4013
	    <title>Amitai Schlair on pkgsrcCon.</title>
4014
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4015
		<p>
4016
		The fourth annual <a
4017
		href="http://www.pkgsrccon.org/2007/">pkgsrcCon</a> is
4018
		April 27-29 in Barcelona. As might be expected when
4019
		brains congregate, pkgsrcCon traditionally results
4020
		in a flurry of activity toward new directions and
4021
		initiatives.  Mere hours after returning to New
4022
		York, Amitai will give us a recap of <a
4023
		href="http://www.pkgsrccon.org/2007/presentations.html">the
4024
		proceedings</a>, including his presentation,
4025
		"Packaging djbware."
4026
		</p><p>
4027
		<a href="http://www.schmonz.com/">Amitai Schlair</a>
4028
		is a pkgsrc developer who has worked in such diverse
4029
		areas as Mac OS X platform support and packages of
4030
		software by Dan Bernstein. His full-time undergraduate
4031
		studies at Columbia are another contributing factor
4032
		to his impending insanity. He consults in software
4033
		and IT.
4034
		</p>
4035
	    ]]></desc>
4036
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10102</overview>
4037
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,pkgsrccon,netbsd,amitai schlair</tags>
4038
	    <files>
4039
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
4040
		<file>
4041
		    <url>nycbug-05-02-07.mp3</url>
4042
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4043
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4044
		    <size>21Mb</size>
4045
		</file>
4046
	    </files>
4047
	</item>
4048
4049
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070406">
4050
	    <title>Ray Lai: on OpenCVS</title>
4051
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4052
		<p>
4053
		This presentation was inspired by the recent
4054
		Subversion presentation. It will talk about the
4055
		origins of OpenRCS and OpenCVS, its real-world usage
4056
		in the OpenBSD project, and why OpenBSD will continue
4057
		to use CVS.
4058
		</p><p>
4059
		Ray is an OpenBSD developer who uses Subversion by
4060
		day, CVS by night. Taking the phrase "complexity
4061
		is the enemy of security" to heart, he believes
4062
		that the beauty of UNIX`s security is in its
4063
		simplicity.
4064
		</p>
4065
	    ]]></desc>
4066
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10104</overview>
4067
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,cvs,openbsd,ray lai</tags>
4068
	    <files>
4069
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
4070
		<file>
4071
		    <url>nycbug-04-04-07.mp3</url>
4072
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4073
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4074
		</file>
4075
	    </files>
4076
	</item>
4077
4078
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070309">
4079
	    <title>Matthew Burnside: Integrated Enterprise Security Mgmt</title>
4080
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4081
		<p>
4082
		<b>Integrated Enterprise Security Management</b>
4083
		</p><p>
4084
		Security policies are a key component in protecting
4085
		enterprise networks. But, while there are many
4086
		diverse defensive options available, current models
4087
		and mechanisms for mechanically-enforced security
4088
		policies are limited to traditional admission-based
4089
		access control. Defensive capabilities include among
4090
		others logging, firewalls, honeypots, rollback/recovery,
4091
		and intrusion detection systems, while policy
4092
		enforcement is essentially limited to one-off access
4093
		control. Furthermore, access-control mechanisms
4094
		operate independently on each service, which can
4095
		(and often does) lead to inconsistent or incorrect
4096
		application of the intended system-wide policy. We
4097
		propose a new scheme for global security policies.
4098
		Every policy decision is made with near-global
4099
		knowledge, and re-evaluated as global knowledge
4100
		changes. Using a variety of actuators, we make the
4101
		full array of defensive capabilities available to
4102
		the global policy. Our goal is a coherent,
4103
		enterprise-wide response to any network threat.
4104
		</p><p>
4105
		<b>Biography</b><br>
4106
		Matthew Burnside is a Ph.D. student in the Computer
4107
		Science department at Columbia University, in New
4108
		York. He works for Professor Angelos Keromytis in
4109
		the Network Security Lab. He received his B.A and
4110
		M.Eng from MIT in 2000, and 2002, respectively. His
4111
		main research interests are in computer security,
4112
		trust management, and network anonymity.
4113
		</p>
4114
	    ]]></desc>
4115
	    <overview>http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=Home;SUBM=10089</overview>
4116
	    <tags>mp3,presentation,enterprise security,matthew burnside</tags>
4117
	    <files>
4118
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
4119
		<file>
4120
		    <url>nycbug-03-07-07.mp3</url>
4121
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4122
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4123
		</file>
4124
	    </files>
4125
	</item>
4126
4127
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070209">
4128
	    <title>Ivan Ivanov on The Version Control System Subversion</title>
4129
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4130
		<p>
4131
		The presentation will discuss Subversion from both
4132
		client and server points of view. It will show how
4133
		to create repositories and how to make them accessible
4134
		over the network using different access schemes
4135
		like http://, file:// or svn://. Pointers are given
4136
		on securing the repositories and on authenticating
4137
		and authorizing the clients.  Next, the presentation
4138
		shows how an user interacts with the repository and
4139
		describes some of the important Subversion client
4140
		commands.  Finally, it deals with administrating
4141
		the repository using "hook scripts".
4142
		</p><p>
4143
		Ivan Ivanov is generally interested in Version
4144
		Control Systems since his student years in Sofia
4145
		University, Bulgaria, where he set up and maintained
4146
		a CVS server for an academic project. When Subversion
4147
		became a fact and proved to be "a better CVS" he
4148
		researched it and last year deployed it for his
4149
		NYC-based employer Ariel Partners
4150
		(http://www.arielpartners.com/). He intergrated the
4151
		Subversion repositories with Apache Web Server over
4152
		https to enable a reliable and secure way to access
4153
		them from any point.
4154
		</p>
4155
	    ]]></desc>
4156
	    <overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</overview>
4157
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,subversion,ivan ivanov</tags>
4158
	    <files>
4159
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
4160
		<file>
4161
		    <url>nycbug-02-07-07.mp3</url>
4162
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4163
		    <tags>nycbug,presentation,subversion,ivan ivanov</tags>
4164
		</file>
4165
	    </files>
4166
	</item>
4167
4168
	<item source="nycbug" added="20070107">
4169
	    <title>Okan Demirmen on PF</title>
4170
	    <desc>
4171
		We have had lots of meetings that have peripherally
4172
		discussed OpenBSD`s wildly popular PF firewall...
4173
		but finally we will have a meeting focused on it.
4174
	    </desc>
4175
	    <overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</overview>
4176
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,openbsd,pf,okan demirmen</tags>
4177
	    <files>
4178
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</prefix>
4179
		<file>
4180
		    <url>nycbug-01-03-07.mp3</url>
4181
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4182
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4183
		</file>
4184
	    </files>
4185
	</item>
4186
4187
	<item source="nycbug" added="20061102">
4188
	    <title>New York City BSD Con 2006: BSD is Dying - A Cautionary Tale of Sex and Greed</title>
4189
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4190
		<p>
4191
		<b>BSD is Dying</b><br>
4192
		<b>A Cautionary Tale of Sex and Greed</b><br>
4193
		<b>Jason Dixon</b><br>
4194
		<b>October 28, 2006</b>
4195
		</p><p>
4196
		First and foremost, I would like to thank the unique
4197
		presentation styles of Dick Hardt and Lawrence
4198
		Lessig for inspiring me to create this presentation.
4199
		</p><p>
4200
		The following videos were created by exporting the
4201
		original Keynote presentation slides into QuickTime
4202
		video, then manually synchronizing them using iMovie
4203
		HD with the audio recordings captured by Nikolai
4204
		Fetissov. They were then exported into QuickTime,
4205
		mpeg4 (H.264/AAC), and iPod movie formats. If you
4206
		are having difficulties with the MP4 copy, and are
4207
		unable to view QuickTime movies, please contact me
4208
		and I'll try to assist.
4209
		</p>
4210
	    ]]></desc>
4211
	    <overview>http://talks.dixongroup.net/nycbsdcon2006/</overview>
4212
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,humor,bsd is dying,jason dixon</tags>
4213
	    <files>
4214
		<prefix>http://talks.dixongroup.net/nycbsdcon2006/</prefix>
4215
		<file>
4216
		    <url>BSD_is_Dying_640x480.mov</url>
4217
		    <size>19Mb</size>
4218
		    <desc>QuickTime</desc>
4219
		    <tags>mov</tags>
4220
		</file>
4221
		<file>
4222
		    <url>BSD_is_Dying_640x480.mp4</url>
4223
		    <size>31Mb</size>
4224
		    <desc>MP4</desc>
4225
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
4226
		</file>
4227
		<file>
4228
		    <url>BSD_is_Dying_640x480.m4v</url>
4229
		    <size>36Mb</size>
4230
		    <desc>iPod</desc>
4231
		    <tags>m4v</tags>
4232
		</file>
4233
	    </files>
4234
	</item>
4235
4236
	<item source="nycbug" added="20061101">
4237
	    <title>New York City BSD Con 2006</title>
4238
	    <desc>
4239
		Audio recordings of presentations given at New York
4240
		City BSD Conference 2006. Courtesy of nikolai at
4241
		fetissov.org. The main page also has links to the
4242
		slides.
4243
	    </desc>
4244
	    <overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbsdcon06/</overview>
4245
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation</tags>
4246
	    <files>
4247
		<prefix>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbsdcon06/</prefix>
4248
		<file>
4249
		    <url>1.1.mp3</url>
4250
		    <size>14 Mb</size>
4251
		    <desc>Corey Benninger: Security with Ruby on Rails in BSD</desc>
4252
		    <tags>mp3,ruby,ruby on rails,security,corey benninger</tags>
4253
		</file>
4254
		<file>
4255
		    <url>1.2.mp3</url>
4256
		    <size>10 Mb</size>
4257
		    <desc>Brian A. Seklecki: A Framework for NetBSD Network Appliances.</desc>
4258
		    <tags>mp3,netbsd,brian a seklecki</tags>
4259
		</file>
4260
		<file>
4261
		    <url>1.3.mp3</url>
4262
		    <size>15 Mb</size>
4263
		    <desc>Bob Beck: PF, it is not just for firewalls anymore.</desc>
4264
		    <tags>mp3,pf,bob beck</tags>
4265
		</file>
4266
		<file>
4267
		    <url>1.4.mp3</url>
4268
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
4269
		    <desc>Bjorn Nelson: A Build System for FreeBSD</desc>
4270
		    <tags>mp3,freebsd,bjorn nelson</tags>
4271
		</file>
4272
		<file>
4273
		    <url>1.5.mp3</url>
4274
		    <size>13 Mb</size>
4275
		    <desc>Johnny C. Lam: The "hidden dependency" problem.</desc>
4276
		    <tags>mp3,johnny c lam</tags>
4277
		</file>
4278
		<file>
4279
		    <url>1.6.mp3</url>
4280
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
4281
		    <desc>Marco Peereboom: Bio &amp; Sensors in OpenBSD.</desc>
4282
		    <tags>mp3,openbsd,sensors,marco peerenboom</tags>
4283
		</file>
4284
		<file>
4285
		    <url>1.7.mp3</url>
4286
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
4287
		    <desc>Russell Sutherland: BSD on the Edge of the Enterprise.</desc>
4288
		    <tags>mp3,russel sutherland</tags>
4289
		</file>
4290
		<file>
4291
		    <url>1.8.mp3</url>
4292
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
4293
		    <desc>Jason Dixon: BSD Is Dying.</desc>
4294
		    <tags>mp3,humor,bsd is dying,jason dixon</tags>
4295
		</file>
4296
		<file>
4297
		    <url>2.1.mp3</url>
4298
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
4299
		    <desc>Jason Wright: OpenBSD on sparc64.</desc>
4300
		    <tags>mp3,openbsd,sparc64,jason wright</tags>
4301
		</file>
4302
		<file>
4303
		    <url>2.2.mp3</url>
4304
		    <size>15 Mb</size>
4305
		    <desc>Kristaps Johnson: BSD Virtualisation with sysjail.</desc>
4306
		    <tags>mp3,sysjail,kristaps johnson</tags>
4307
		</file>
4308
		<file>
4309
		    <url>2.3.mp3</url>
4310
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
4311
		    <desc>Wietse Venema: Postfix as a Secure Programming Example.</desc>
4312
		    <tags>mp3,postfix,wietse venema</tags>
4313
		</file>
4314
		<file>
4315
		    <url>2.4.mp3</url>
4316
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
4317
		    <desc>Bob Beck: spamd - spam deferral daemon.</desc>
4318
		    <tags>mp3,spamd,bob beck</tags>
4319
		</file>
4320
	    </files>
4321
	</item>
4322
4323
	<item source="nycbug" added="20060909">
4324
	    <title>Isaac `Ike` Levy on m0n0wall and PFSense</title>
4325
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4326
		UNIX professionals are busy these days. Setting up
4327
		routers and firewalls are fundamental to any network,
4328
		but in environments where the focus is on various
4329
		applications, (servers, workstations, and the
4330
		software that runs on them), it`s difficult for a
4331
		business not to choose off-the-shelf SOHO routers
4332
		and networking gear. The web management gui`s are
4333
		understandable by everyone, (even techs without
4334
		UNIX knowledge), and the gear is cheap - this saves
4335
		time and money.
4336
		<br>
4337
		In the meantime, the features of your average Linksys
4338
		or Netgear router often leave MUCH to be desired,
4339
		(https auth management, for one simple example).
4340
		<br>
4341
		Enter m0n0wall and PFSense, 2 BSD based packaged
4342
		router/firewall solutions that are as solid and
4343
		full featured as you`d expect from any BSD system-
4344
		PLUS THEY HAVE HTML WEB INTERFACES FOR MANAGEMENT!
4345
		<br>
4346
		m0n0wall and PFSense become an easy sell in any
4347
		small professional enviornment, any competent tech
4348
		can manage the network within minutes... At home,
4349
		in every hackers home network, they free the hacker
4350
		to have trusted tools available, but are as time-saving
4351
		as using any Linksys router.
4352
		<br>
4353
		m0n0wall and PFSense are both light and clean,
4354
		designed to run on embedded systems- (Soekris,
4355
		WRAP), but are monsters when unleashed on even
4356
		legacy PC`s around the office. If you manage UNIX
4357
		networks and systems all day, do you really want
4358
		to manage the router for your DSL when you get home?
4359
		But then doesn`t it bug you to use a chincey Linksys
4360
		box?
4361
		<br>
4362
		Ike has been a member of NYC*BUG since we first
4363
		launched in January 2004. He is a long-time member
4364
		of the Lower East Side Mac Unix User Group. He has
4365
		spoken frequently on a number of topics at various
4366
		venues, particularly on the issue of FreeBSD`s jail
4367
		(8).
4368
	    ]]></desc>
4369
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,monowall,pfsense,isaac levy</tags>
4370
	    <files>
4371
		<file>
4372
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-09-06-06.mp3</url>
4373
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
4374
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4375
		</file>
4376
	    </files>
4377
	</item>
4378
4379
	<item source="nycbug" added="20060807">
4380
	    <title>Alfred Perlstein on Sendmail Hacks</title>
4381
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4382
		 Alfred will discuss the hacks used to turn Sendmail
4383
		 into a high performance solution for delivering
4384
		 millions of messages to OKCupid`s subscribers.
4385
		 Topics covered will be system tuning and sendmail
4386
		 hacks used in house to achieve massive throughput.
4387
		 <br>
4388
		 Alfred Perlstein is the CTO of OKcupid.com, the
4389
		 largest free online dating site. He has been a
4390
		 FreeBSD hacker for five years, he`s worked on NFS,
4391
		 VFS, pthreads, networking and general system
4392
		 maintenance during his tenure on both FreeBSD and
4393
		 OS X kernels.
4394
	    ]]></desc>
4395
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,sendmail,alfred perlstein</tags>
4396
	    <files>
4397
		<file>
4398
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-07-05-06.mp3</url>
4399
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
4400
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4401
		</file>
4402
	    </files>
4403
	</item>
4404
4405
	<!-- Source: FreeBSD for All
4406
	-->
4407
4408
	<item source="f4all" added="20061127">
4409
	    <title>Episode 08 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
4410
	    <desc>
4411
		 This week we talk about some tips, latest news, Press Coverage and yes, some jazz.
4412
	    </desc>
4413
	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/11/episode-08.html</overview>
4414
	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk</tags>
4415
	    <files>
4416
		<prefix>http://dl01.blastpodcast.com/freebsdforall/</prefix>
4417
		<file>
4418
		    <url>15403_1164691046.mp3</url>
4419
		    <size>18 Mb</size>
4420
		    <desc>128 kbps MP3 version</desc>
4421
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4422
		</file>
4423
	    </files>
4424
	</item>
4425
4426
	<item source="f4all" added="20060727">
4427
	    <title>Episode 07 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
4428
	    <desc>
4429
		 This week we talk about podcast clients, ipfw firewall etc.
4430
	    </desc>
4431
	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/07/episode-07.html</overview>
4432
	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk,podcast clients,ipfw</tags>
4433
	    <files>
4434
		<prefix>http://www.archive.org/download/FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07/</prefix>
4435
		<file>
4436
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07.mp3</url>
4437
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
4438
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
4439
		    <desc>128 kbps MP3 version</desc>
4440
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4441
		</file>
4442
		<file>
4443
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07_64kb.mp3</url>
4444
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
4445
		    <desc>64 kbps MP3 version</desc>
4446
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4447
		</file>
4448
		<file>
4449
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07.ogg</url>
4450
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
4451
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
4452
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
4453
		</file>
4454
	    </files>
4455
	</item>
4456
4457
	<item source="f4all" added="20060605">
4458
	    <title>Episode 06 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
4459
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4460
		<p>
4461
		This week we talk about-
4462
		<ul>
4463
		<li>Macromedia plugin
4464
		<li>FreeBSD-Linux differences part 2
4465
		<li>John Baldwin Introduction
4466
		<li>Podcast anouncement - call for co-hosts!
4467
		</ul>
4468
		</p>
4469
	    ]]></desc>
4470
	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/06/episode-06.html</overview>
4471
	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk,john baldwin,freebsd vs linux</tags>
4472
	    <files>
4473
		<prefix>http://www.archive.org/download/FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06/</prefix>
4474
		<file>
4475
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06.mp3</url>
4476
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
4477
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4478
		</file>
4479
		<file>
4480
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06.ogg</url>
4481
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
4482
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
4483
		</file>
4484
		<file>
4485
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06_64kb.mp3</url>
4486
		    <desc>64 kbps MP3 version</desc>
4487
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
4488
		</file>
4489
	    </files>
4490
	</item>
4491
4492
	<!-- Source: Bay Area FreeBSD Users Group
4493
	-->
4494
4495
	<item source="bafug" added="20060909">
4496
	    <title>Nate Lawson on ACPI</title>
4497
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4498
		<b>Our Topic:</b>
4499
		FreeBSD's ACPI implementation: The details.
4500
		<br>
4501
		<b>Our Speaker:</b>
4502
		Nate Lawson, FreeBSD Committer.
4503
		<br>
4504
		<b>Our Topic:</b>
4505
		FreeBSD's ACPI implementation is based on code for ACPI released
4506
		by Intel. Nate and others wrote the glue code to make this code
4507
		work on FreeBSD. He explains how this was done, and why.
4508
	    ]]></desc>
4509
	    <tags>bafug,presentation,freebsd,acpi,nate lawson</tags>
4510
	    <files>
4511
		<file>
4512
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/ACPI/bafug7-nate2.mov</url>
4513
		    <size>245 Mb</size>
4514
		    <tags>mov</tags>
4515
		</file>
4516
	    </files>
4517
	</item>
4518
4519
	<item source="bafug" added="20060810">
4520
	    <title>Network Protocol Development Tools and Techniques for FreeBSD</title>
4521
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4522
		<b>Our Topic:</b>
4523
		Network Protocol Development Tools and Techniques for FreeBSD
4524
		<br>
4525
		<b>Our Speaker:</b>
4526
		George Neville-Neil, co-author of the "Design and
4527
		Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System"
4528
		"daemon" book.
4529
		<br>
4530
		<b>Our Topic:</b>
4531
		While computers have gotten faster and more powerful
4532
		the tools we use to develop network protocols, such
4533
		as TCP, UDP, IPv4 and IPv6 have not.  Most network
4534
		protocols are developed, in C, in the kernel, and
4535
		require a lot of work to test. Over the past year
4536
		or so I have been working with virtual machines, a
4537
		couple of pieces of open source software, and begun
4538
		developing a library for use in protocol testing.
4539
		This talk will cover three topics:
4540
		<ol>
4541
		<li>Developing and testing kernel code with Virtual Machines
4542
		<li>Finding good tests for networking code
4543
		<li>Packet Construction Set (PCS) a new library for
4544
		    writing protocol tests
4545
		</ol>
4546
		]]></desc>
4547
	    <tags>bafug,presentation,freebsd,packet construction set,george neville-neil</tags>
4548
	    <files>
4549
		<file>
4550
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/bafug6-gnn.mov</url>
4551
		    <size>211 Mb</size>
4552
		    <tags>mov</tags>
4553
		</file>
4554
	    </files>
4555
	</item>
4556
4557
	<item source="bafug" added="20060713">
4558
	    <title>Tim Kientzler on developing libarchive and tar</title>
4559
	    <desc>
4560
		   libarchive..........Tim Kientzler on developing
4561
		   libarchive and tar.
4562
	    </desc>
4563
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/libarchive/</overview>
4564
	    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
4565
	    <files>
4566
		<prefix>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/libarchive</prefix>
4567
		<file>
4568
		    <url>bafug5-tim-1.mov</url>
4569
		    <size>50 Mb</size>
4570
		    <desc>Part 1</desc>
4571
		    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
4572
		</file>
4573
		<file>
4574
		    <url>bafug5-tim-2.mov</url>
4575
		    <size>125 Mb</size>
4576
		    <desc>Part 2</desc>
4577
		    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
4578
		</file>
4579
		<file>
4580
		    <url>bafug5-tim-3.mov</url>
4581
		    <size>30 Mb</size>
4582
		    <desc>Part 3</desc>
4583
		    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
4584
		</file>
4585
	    </files>
4586
	</item>
4587
4588
	<!-- Source: meetbsd
4589
	-->
4590
4591
	<item source="meetbsd" added="20080528">
4592
	    <title>MeetBSD 2007 - Presentations and recordings</title>
4593
	    <desc>
4594
		MeetBSD 2007 at the Conference Centre-PWSBiA Congress in Warsaw
4595
	    </desc>
4596
	    <overview>http://2007.meetbsd.org/en/speakers/</overview>
4597
	    <tags>meetbsd,meetbsd2007</tags>
4598
	    <files>
4599
		<prefix>http://2007.meetbsd.org/</prefix>
4600
		<file>
4601
		    <url>/movies/matt.olander_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4602
		    <size>272 Mb</size>
4603
		    <desc>Matt Olander - PC-BSD: FreeBSD on the Desktop</desc>
4604
		    <tags>pc-bsd,matt olander,avi</tags>
4605
		</file>
4606
		<file>
4607
		    <url>/movies/jakub.klausa_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4608
		    <size>165 Mb</size>
4609
		    <desc>Dominik Hamera, Jakub Klausa - Nowoczesne rozwiazania bezprzewodowe w systemie FreeBSD</desc>
4610
		    <tags>freebsd,wireless,polish,dominik hamera,jakub klausa,avi</tags>
4611
		</file>
4612
		<file>
4613
		    <url>/storage/rafal.jaworowski_meetBSD2007.pdf</url>
4614
		    <size>600 Kb</size>
4615
		    <length>21 pages</length>
4616
		    <desc>Rafal Jaworowski - FreeBSD do zabudowy, czyli nie tylko pecety</desc>
4617
		    <tags>freebsd,polish,rafal jaworowski,pdf</tags>
4618
		</file>
4619
		<file>
4620
		    <url>/movies/rafal.jaworowski_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4621
		    <size>638 Mb</size>
4622
		    <desc>Rafal Jaworowski - FreeBSD do zabudowy, czyli nie tylko pecety</desc>
4623
		    <tags>freebsd,polish,rafal jaworowski,avi</tags>
4624
		</file>
4625
		<file>
4626
		    <url>/storage/kris.kennaway_meetbsd2007.pdf</url>
4627
		    <size>336 Kb</size>
4628
		    <length>37 pages</length>
4629
		    <desc>Kris Kennaway - New features and improvements in FreeBSD 7</desc>
4630
		    <tags>freebsd,kris kennaway,pdf</tags>
4631
		</file>
4632
		<file>
4633
		    <url>/movies/kris.kennaway_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4634
		    <size>564 Mb</size>
4635
		    <desc>Kris Kennaway - New features and improvements in FreeBSD 7</desc>
4636
		    <tags>freebsd,kris kennaway,avi</tags>
4637
		</file>
4638
		<file>
4639
		    <url>/storage/brooks.davis_meetbsd2007.pdf</url>
4640
		    <size>1.7 Mb</size>
4641
		    <length>25 Pages</length>
4642
		    <desc>Brooks Davis - Reflections on Building a High-Performance Computing Cluster Using FreeBSD</desc>
4643
		    <tags>freebsd,high performance,brooks davis,pdf</tags>
4644
		</file>
4645
		<file>
4646
		    <url>/movies/brooks.davis_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4647
		    <size>401 Mb</size>
4648
		    <desc>Brooks Davis - Reflections on Building a High-Performance Computing Cluster Using FreeBSD</desc>
4649
		    <tags>freebsd,high performance,brooks davis,avi</tags>
4650
		</file>
4651
		<file>
4652
		    <url>/storage/philip.paeps_meetBSD2007.pdf</url>
4653
		    <size>495 Kb</size>
4654
		    <length>53 Pages</length>
4655
		    <desc>Philip Paeps - Detangling and debugging: friends in unexpected places</desc>
4656
		    <tags>freebsd,debugging,philip paeps,pdf</tags>
4657
		</file>
4658
		<file>
4659
		    <url>/movies/philip.paeps_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4660
		    <size>162 Mb</size>
4661
		    <desc>Philip Paeps - Detangling and debugging: friends in unexpected places</desc>
4662
		    <tags>freebsd,debugging,philip paeps,avi</tags>
4663
		</file>
4664
		<file>
4665
		    <url>/storage/slawomir.zak_meetBSD2007.pdf</url>
4666
		    <size>1.1 Mb</size>
4667
		    <length>35 Pages</length>
4668
		    <desc>Slawomir Zak - DTrace - Monitoring i strojenie systemu w XXI wieku</desc>
4669
		    <tags>tuning,monitoring,dtrace,slawomir zak,pdf</tags>
4670
		</file>
4671
		<file>
4672
		    <url>/movies/slawomir.zak_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4673
		    <size>546 Mb</size>
4674
		    <desc>Slawomir Zak - DTrace - Monitoring i strojenie systemu w XXI wieku</desc>
4675
		    <tags>tuning,monitoring,dtrace,polish,slawomir zak,avi</tags>
4676
		</file>
4677
		<file>
4678
		    <url>/storage/MeetBSD2007-GSoC-PawelSolyga.pdf</url>
4679
		    <size>3.7 Mb</size>
4680
		    <length>71 Pages</length>
4681
		    <desc>Pawel Solyga - Meet BSD projects from Google Summer of Code 2007</desc>
4682
		    <tags>google,gsoc,freebsd,netbsd,pawel solyga,pdf</tags>
4683
		</file>
4684
		<file>
4685
		    <url>/storage/MeetBSD2007-GSoC-PawelSolyga.mov</url>
4686
		    <size>6.0 Mb</size>
4687
		    <desc>Pawel Solyga - Meet BSD projects from Google Summer of Code 2007</desc>
4688
		    <tags>google,gsoc,freebsd,netbsd,pawel solyga,quicktime</tags>
4689
		</file>
4690
		<file>
4691
		    <url>/movies/pawel.solyga_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4692
		    <size>308 Mb</size>
4693
		    <desc>Pawel Solyga - Meet BSD projects from Google Summer of Code 2007</desc>
4694
		    <tags>google,gsoc,freebsd,netbsd,polish,pawel solyga,avi</tags>
4695
		</file>
4696
		<file>
4697
		    <url>/storage/ss7_meetBSD2007.pdf</url>
4698
		    <size>3.9 Mb</size>
4699
		    <length>71 Pages</length>
4700
		    <desc>Adam Bartman, Rafal Grzebyk - Nowoczesna infrastruktura telefoniczna w oparciu o systemy z rodziny BSD</desc>
4701
		    <tags>telephony,voip,freebsd,polish,adam bartman,rafal grzebyk,pdf</tags>
4702
		</file>
4703
		<file>
4704
		    <url>/movies/bartman+grzebyk_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4705
		    <size>105 Mb</size>
4706
		    <desc>Adam Bartman, Rafal Grzebyk - Nowoczesna infrastruktura telefoniczna w oparciu o systemy z rodziny BSD</desc>
4707
		    <tags>telephony,voip,freebsd,polish,adam bartman,rafal grzebyk,avi</tags>
4708
		</file>
4709
		<file>
4710
		    <url>/storage/christian.brueffer_meetBSD2007.pdf</url>
4711
		    <size>416 Kb</size>
4712
		    <length>34 Pages</length>
4713
		    <desc><![CDATA[Christian Br&uuml;ffer - Protecting your Privacy with FreeBSD and Tor]]></desc>
4714
		    <tags>tor,freebsd,christian bruffer,pdf</tags>
4715
		</file>
4716
		<file>
4717
		    <url>/movies/christian.brueffer_meetbsd2007.avi</url>
4718
		    <size>409 Kb</size>
4719
		    <desc><![CDATA[Christian Br&uuml;ffer - Protecting your Privacy with FreeBSD and Tor]]></desc>
4720
		    <tags>tor,freebsd,christian bruffer,avi</tags>
4721
		</file>
4722
	    </files>
4723
	</item>
4724
4725
	<!-- Source: BSDCONSPAIN
4726
	-->
4727
4728
	<item source="bsdconspain" added="20080527">
4729
	    <title>Manuel Trujillo - FreeBSD para usuarios de GNU/Linux</title>
4730
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4731
		<p>
4732
		Charla sobre las diferencias que puede encontrar un usuario
4733
		de un sistema operativo GNU/Linux cuando accede a un sistema
4734
		operativo FreeBSD, y sugerencias superar la posible
4735
		desorientaci&oacute;n.
4736
		</p>
4737
	    ]]></desc>
4738
	    <link>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentations.html</link>
4739
	    <tags>bsdcon-barcelona,spanish,presentation,freebsd,linux,manuel trujillo</tags>
4740
	    <files>
4741
		<file>
4742
		    <url>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentaciones/FreeBSD_para_linuxeros.ppt</url>
4743
		    <size>32 Kb</size>
4744
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
4745
		</file>
4746
	    </files>
4747
	</item>
4748
4749
	<item source="bsdconspain" added="20080527">
4750
	    <title>Jordi Prats - Uso de OpenBSD en dispositivos empotrados</title>
4751
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4752
		<p>
4753
		Los sistemas empotrados gracias a un menor consumo
4754
		energ&eacute;tico y unas dimensiones reducidas, a costa
4755
		de ciertas limitaciones del hardware, permiten su uso
4756
		en multitud de entornos. En esta presentaci&oacute;n
4757
		veremos como usarlos con OpenBSD y sus posibles aplicaciones.
4758
		</p>
4759
	    ]]></desc>
4760
	    <link>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentations.html</link>
4761
	    <tags>bsdcon-barcelona,spanish,presentation,openbsd,embedded,jordi prats</tags>
4762
	    <files>
4763
		<file>
4764
		    <url>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentaciones/embeddedBSD.pdf</url>
4765
		    <size>1.8 Mb</size>
4766
		    <length>44 pages</length>
4767
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
4768
		</file>
4769
	    </files>
4770
	</item>
4771
4772
	<item source="bsdconspain" added="20080527">
4773
	    <title><![CDATA[Jes&uacute;s Rodriguez - SIP y VozIP con FreeBSD]]></title>
4774
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4775
		<p>
4776
		Repaso a las diferentes aplicaciones y servicios
4777
		relacionados con SIP y VozIP que pueden usarse en
4778
		FreeBSD. Entre estas apliaciones destacan OpenSER y
4779
		Asterisk, ya que usados de forma conjunta pueden ofrecer
4780
		una larga lista de servicios de forma r&aacute;pida,
4781
		segura y escalable.
4782
		</p>
4783
	    ]]></desc>
4784
	    <link>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentations.html</link>
4785
	    <tags>bsdcon-barcelona,spanish,presentation,asterisk,openser,freebsd,sip,voip,jesus rodriguez</tags>
4786
	    <files>
4787
		<file>
4788
		    <url>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentaciones/bsdcon-asterisk-openser.pdf</url>
4789
		    <size>527 Kb</size>
4790
		    <length>40 pages</length>
4791
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
4792
		</file>
4793
	    </files>
4794
	</item>
4795
4796
	<item source="bsdconspain" added="20080527">
4797
	    <title>Jordi Espasa Clofent - Sistema de cortafuegos redundantes con OpenBSD y Packet Filter en modo bridge</title>
4798
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4799
		<p>
4800
		Se trataran los siguientes apartados: Porqu&eacute; OpenBSD
4801
		y porqu&eacute; PF. Eligiendo un buen hardware para el
4802
		cortafuegos. Redundancia en modo bridge: RSTP.
4803
		Implementaci&oacute;n en si.
4804
		</p>
4805
	    ]]></desc>
4806
	    <link>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentations.html</link>
4807
	    <tags>bsdcon-barcelona,spanish,presentation,openbsd,firewall,pf,jordi espasa clofent</tags>
4808
	    <files>
4809
		<file>
4810
		    <url>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentaciones/sistema_cortafuegos_redundantes_openbsd.ppt</url>
4811
		    <size>1 Mb</size>
4812
		    <tags>ppt</tags>
4813
		</file>
4814
	    </files>
4815
	</item>
4816
4817
	<item source="bsdconspain" added="20080527">
4818
	    <title>Julio M. Merino Vidal - ATF: Sistema de pruebas automatizado para NetBSD</title>
4819
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4820
		<p>
4821
		La presentaci&oacute;n empezar&aacute; describiendo la
4822
		necesidad de poder probar autom&aacute;ticamente la
4823
		validez del c&oacute;digo del sistema operativo NetBSD
4824
		para as&iacute; saber que se comporta correctamente en
4825
		cualquiera de las plataformas soportadas. Luego se
4826
		explicar&aacute; c&oacute;mo se estructura ATF, c&oacute;mo
4827
		se integra con NetBSD y se daran ejemplos pr&aacute;cticos
4828
		de su uso tanto como programador o usuario.
4829
		</p><p>
4830
		ATF es un proyecto autocontenido que funciona en multitud
4831
		de plataformas (y no s&oacute;lo BSD). A&uacute;n as&iacute;,
4832
		est&aacute; centrado en NetBSD y las pruebas automatizadas
4833
		para este sistema son espec&iacute;ficas de &eacute;l, no
4834
		del proyecto ATF en s&iacute;.
4835
		</p>
4836
	    ]]></desc>
4837
	    <link>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentations.html</link>
4838
	    <tags>bsdcon-barcelona,spanish,presentation,atf,netbsd,julio m merino vidal</tags>
4839
	    <files>
4840
		<file>
4841
		    <url>http://bcn.bsdcon.net/presentaciones/ATF.pptx</url>
4842
		    <size>234 Kb</size>
4843
		    <tags>ppt</tags>
4844
		</file>
4845
	    </files>
4846
	</item>
4847
4848
	<!-- Source: FOSDEM
4849
	-->
4850
4851
	<item source="fosdem" added="20080527">
4852
	    <title>Robert Watson - How a large scale opensource project works</title>
4853
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4854
		<p>
4855
		The FreeBSD Project is one of the oldest and most
4856
		successful open source operating system projects,
4857
		seeing wide deployment across the IT industry. From
4858
		the root name servers, to top tier ISPs, to core
4859
		router operating systems, to firewalls, to embedded
4860
		appliances, you can't use a networked computer for
4861
		ten minutes without using FreeBSD dozens of times.
4862
		</p><p>
4863
		Part of FreeBSD's reputation for quality and
4864
		reliability comes from the nature of its development
4865
		organization -- driven by a hundreds of highly
4866
		skilled volunteers, from high school students to
4867
		university professors. And unlike most open source
4868
		projects, the FreeBSD Project has developers who
4869
		have been working on the same source base for over
4870
		twenty years.
4871
		</p><p>
4872
		But how does this organization work? Who pays the
4873
		bandwidth bills, runs the web servers, writes the
4874
		documentation, writes the code, and calls the shots?
4875
		And how can developers in a dozen time zones reach
4876
		agreement on the time of day, let alone a kernel
4877
		architecture?
4878
		</p><p>
4879
		This presentation will attempt to provide, in 45
4880
		minutes, a brief if entertaining snapshot into what
4881
		makes FreeBSD run.
4882
		</p>
4883
	    ]]></desc>
4884
	    <link>http://fosdem.org/2008/schedule/events/large_scale_opensource</link>
4885
	    <tags>fosdem,fosdem2008,presentation,freebsd project,robert watson</tags>
4886
	    <files>
4887
		<file>
4888
		    <url>http://video.fosdem.org/2008/maintracks/FOSDEM2008-largescale.ogg</url>
4889
		    <size>81 Mb</size>
4890
		    <length>45 minutes</length>
4891
		    <tags>ogg,video</tags>
4892
		</file>
4893
	    </files>
4894
	</item>
4895
4896
	<!-- Source: source21
4897
	-->
4898
4899
	<item source="source21" added="20060605">
4900
	    <title>Fosdem 2006: BSD</title>
4901
	    <desc>
4902
		We talk with Daniel Seuffert about BSD. Several
4903
		flavours of bsd were represented in a joint BSD
4904
		booth: openbsd, freebsd, netbsd and miros. Daniel
4905
		is representative of the FreeBSD project and among
4906
		other things talks about the different operating
4907
		systems that are build on top of freebsd. For
4908
		instance, there are two distributions called pcbsd
4909
		and desktopbsd that are targetted towards desktop
4910
		users. There also is a version that specializes on
4911
		security entitled trustedbsd.
4912
	    </desc>
4913
	    <link>http://www.source21.nl/2006/06/05/fosdem-2006-bsd/</link>
4914
	    <tags>source21,interview,daniel seuffert</tags>
4915
	    <files>
4916
		<file>
4917
		    <url>http://www.source21.nl/media/20060605/bsd_-_daniel_seuffert.mp4</url>
4918
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
4919
		</file>
4920
	    </files>
4921
	</item>
4922
4923
	<!-- Source: ccc22
4924
	-->
4925
4926
	<item source="ccc22" added="20060823">
4927
	    <title>COMPLETE Hard Disk Encryption with FreeBSD</title>
4928
	    <desc><![CDATA[
4929
		<p>
4930
		COMPLETE Hard Disk Encryption with FreeBSD, by Marc Schiesser
4931
		</p><p>
4932
		Learn how to effectively protect not only your data
4933
		but also your applications.
4934
		</p><p>
4935
		Most technologies and techniques intended for
4936
		securing digital data focus on protection while the
4937
		machine is turned on  mostly by defending against
4938
		remote attacks. An attacker with physical access
4939
		to the machine, however, can easily circumvent these
4940
		defenses by reading out the contents of the storage
4941
		medium on a different, fully accessible system or
4942
		even compromise program code on it in order to leak
4943
		encrypted information. Especially for mobile users,
4944
		that threat is real. And for those carrying around
4945
		sensitive data, the risk is most likely high. This
4946
		talk will introduce a method of mitigating that
4947
		particular risk by protecting not only the data
4948
		through encryption, but also the applications and
4949
		the operating system from being compromised while
4950
		the machine is turned off.
4951
		</p>
4952
	    ]]></desc>
4953
	    <overview>http://events.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/events/1139.en.html</overview>
4954
	    <tags>ccc,ccc2005,ccc22,presentation,freebsd,harddisk encryption,marc schiesser</tags>
4955
	    <files>
4956
		<file>
4957
		    <url>http://events.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/attachments/687-slides_Complete_Hard_Disk_Encryption.pdf</url>
4958
		    <size>679Kb</size>
4959
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
4960
		    <tags>slides</tags>
4961
		</file>
4962
		<file>
4963
		    <url><![CDATA[http://vp.video.google.com/videodownload?version=0&secureurl=uAAAANDveMbSROZ54T6ovHpX7U46rpfxARh9qN1NEemo6WM7qeDBk-8GxxtGIXTqDRuaHnUUJVcUs0bf539CXM4fqBp6xeb9INr7CRp9JPcKZeT9UsSqDsvdYZhiN7xnPzju7rN379RkfS47rjI8TnCJ1iQdrEqhd8Okw_KJcO7O3Iq00GUYYZaedmq5jrmy1ezFXGAG6KURgb8RV19cCaui1U0zVEKd2ApjzlxRHSi89QBih_VSyFE64p3haNyy76qCVQ&sigh=GK-OoKkmqQWNalgoUzB4HmzA3EI&begin=0&len=3967520&docid=-2979502732836620391]]></url>
4964
		    <length>1:06:07</length>
4965
		    <desc>Google Video</desc>
4966
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
4967
		</file>
4968
		<file>
4969
		    <url>http://events.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/attachments/905-22C3-1139-en-complete_harddisk_encryption_with_freebsd.mp4.torrent</url>
4970
		    <size>37Kb</size>
4971
		    <desc>Bittorrent link</desc>
4972
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
4973
		</file>
4974
	    </files>
4975
	</item>
4976
4977
	<!-- Source: aauug
4978
	-->
4979
4980
	<item source="aauug" added="20070115">
4981
	    <title>FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen</title>
4982
	    <desc>
4983
		"FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen" at the AAUUG,
4984
		AAUUG, 22 August 2006 by Simon L. Nielsen (FreeBSD
4985
		Deputy Security Officer)
4986
	    </desc>
4987
	    <overview>http://www.aauug.dk/foredrag.html</overview>
4988
	    <tags>aauug,presentation,danish,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
4989
	    <files>
4990
		<file>
4991
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~simon/presentations/freebsd-so-function-aauug-2006-08-22.pdf</url>
4992
		    <size>211 Kb</size>
4993
		    <desc>PDF (danish)</desc>
4994
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
4995
		</file>
4996
	    </files>
4997
	</item>
4998
4999
	<!-- Source: bsd-dk
5000
	-->
5001
5002
	<item source="bsd-dk" added="20070115">
5003
	    <title>FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen</title>
5004
	    <desc>
5005
		"FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen" at the BSD-DK,
5006
		26 August 2006 by Simon L. Nielsen (FreeBSD Deputy
5007
		Security Officer)
5008
	    </desc>
5009
	    <tags>aauug,presentation,danish,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
5010
	    <files>
5011
		<file>
5012
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~simon/presentations/freebsd-so-function-bsd-dk-2006-08.pdf</url>
5013
		    <size>210 Kb</size>
5014
		    <desc>PDF (danish)</desc>
5015
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
5016
		</file>
5017
	    </files>
5018
	</item>
5019
5020
	<!-- Source: Google Tech Talk
5021
	-->
5022
5023
	<item source="googletechtalks" added="20070704">
5024
	    <title>Google Tech Talks June 20, 2007: How the FreeBSD Project Works</title>
5025
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5026
		 <p>
5027
		 The FreeBSD Project is one of the oldest and most
5028
		 successful open source operating system ... all
5029
		 projects, seeing wide deployment across the IT
5030
		 industry. From the root name servers, to top tier
5031
		 ISPs, to core router operating systems, to firewalls,
5032
		 to embedded appliances, you can't use a networked
5033
		 computer for ten minutes without using FreeBSD
5034
		 dozens of times. Part of FreeBSD's reputation for
5035
		 quality and reliability comes from the nature of
5036
		 its development organization--driven by a hundreds
5037
		 of highly skilled volunteers, from high school
5038
		 students to university professors. And unlike most
5039
		 open source projects, the FreeBSD Project has
5040
		 developers who have been working on the same source
5041
		 base for over twenty years. But how does this
5042
		 organization work? Who pays the bandwidth bills,
5043
		 runs the web servers, writes the documentation,
5044
		 writes the code, and calls the shots? And how can
5045
		 developers in a dozen time zones reach agreement
5046
		 on the time of day, let alone a kernel architecture?
5047
		 This presentation will attempt to provide, in 45
5048
		 minutes, a brief if entertaining snapshot into
5049
		 what makes FreeBSD run.
5050
		 </p><p>
5051
		 Speaker: Robert Watson Robert Watson is a researcher
5052
		 at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory
5053
		 investinging operating system and network security.
5054
		 Prior to joining the Computer Laboratory to work
5055
		 on a PhD, he was a Senior Principal Scientist at
5056
		 McAfee Research, now SPARTA ISSO, a leading security
5057
		 research and development organization, where he
5058
		 directed government and commercial research contracts
5059
		 for customers that include DARPA, the US Navy, and
5060
		 Apple Computer. His research interests include
5061
		 operating system security, network stack structure
5062
		 and performance, and windowing system structure.
5063
		 He is also a member of the FreeBSD Core Team and
5064
		 president of the FreeBSD Foundation.
5065
		 </p>
5066
	    ]]></desc>
5067
	    <overview><![CDATA[
5068
		http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4400856579609253323&total=1&start=0&num=10&so=1&type=search&plindex=0
5069
		]]></overview>
5070
	    <tags>google,presentation,freebsd,freebsd project,robert watson</tags>
5071
	    <files>
5072
		<file>
5073
		    <url><![CDATA[
5074
			http://vp.video.google.com/videodownload?version=0&secureurl=uAAAAMnsi51RXPgEl7zGKAWEdrKWWWjUJ5q602Nvd2V5YwaDTyCIRM5k8Rq4nUZipL4tHODLiuiSxq34qoHi8TiEyXrdjKI8_WN0fXSKQYyrrlrWKMWd5Vw7AuXiu_B0uHEadc-fR6np2MP0ItJbT-Zx-J0-GCx0Mya2fQLoLG2pb55veUzTepcJz2RsKjNaGM-XUHpxqTZoIh0rggQIkNp-vZzghRb_8JQanc00ChX2CYB3LogDCHj1hpnFFmFd-2sEEg&sigh=ZrfuqGS7FqWRpFYVklZH1V4LRj4&begin=0&len=3053322&docid=-4400856579609253323
5075
		    ]]></url>
5076
		    <size>321 Mb</size>
5077
		    <length>51 minutes</length>
5078
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5079
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5080
		</file>
5081
	    </files>
5082
	</item>
5083
	
5084
5085
	<!-- Source: nuug
5086
	-->
5087
5088
	<item source="nuug" added="20061003">
5089
	    <title>Releaseparty, the Varnish HTTP accelerator</title>
5090
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5091
		<p>
5092
		VG sponsored the creation of a web-accellerator
5093
		called "Varnish" because Squid was too slow for
5094
		them. Varnish is being developed by Poul-Henning
5095
		Kamp and the Norwegian Linux consultancy Linpro.
5096
		This is the releaseparty for version 1.0.
5097
		</p><p>
5098
		The first half of the talk will introduce Varnish
5099
		and present some of the novel features it brings
5100
		to the business of web-serving.
5101
		</p><p>
5102
		The second half of the talk, using Varnish as the
5103
		example, will show ways to get the most performance
5104
		out of modern hardware and operating systems.
5105
		</p><p>
5106
		(The English text starts at about 5 minutes in the stream)
5107
		</p>
5108
	    ]]></desc>
5109
	    <overview>http://www.nuug.no/aktiviteter/20060919-varnish/</overview>
5110
	    <tags>nuug,presentation,varnish,poul-henning kamp</tags>
5111
	    <files>
5112
		<prefix>http://www.nuug.no/pub/video/published/</prefix>
5113
		<file>
5114
		    <url>20060919-varnish.mpeg</url>
5115
		    <size>230 Mb</size>
5116
		    <desc>Video version</desc>
5117
		    <tags>mpeg</tags>
5118
		</file>
5119
		<file>
5120
		    <url>20060919-varnish.mp3</url>
5121
		    <length>47.8 Mb</length>
5122
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5123
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
5124
		</file>
5125
	    </files>
5126
	</item>
5127
5128
	<item source="openbsd" added="20061010">
5129
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.0 Release Songs - OpenVOX</title>
5130
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5131
		<p>
5132
		This is an extra track by the artist Ty Semaka (who
5133
		really has "had Puffy on his mind") which we included
5134
		on the audio CD.
5135
		</p><p>
5136
		This song details the process that Ty has to go
5137
		through to make the art and music for each OpenBSD
5138
		release. Ty and Theo really do go to a (very specific)
5139
		bar and discuss what is going on in the project,
5140
		and then try to find a theme that will work...
5141
		</p><p>
5142
		For RSS readers: Please note that the download URL
5143
		is an FTP site.
5144
		</p>
5145
	    ]]></desc>
5146
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#audio_extra</overview>
5147
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5148
	    <files>
5149
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
5150
		<file>
5151
		    <url>songty.mp3</url>
5152
		    <size>3.9 Mb</size>
5153
		    <length>4 minutes</length>
5154
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5155
		    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5156
		</file>
5157
		<file>
5158
		    <url>songty.ogg</url>
5159
		    <size>6.0 Mb</size>
5160
		    <length>4 minutes</length>
5161
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
5162
		    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5163
		</file>
5164
	    </files>
5165
	</item>
5166
5167
	<item source="openbsd" added="20080503">
5168
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.3 Release Song - "Home to Hypocrisy"</title>
5169
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5170
		<p>
5171
		We are just plain tired of being lectured to by a
5172
		man who is a lot like Naomi Campbell.
5173
		</p><p>
5174
		In 1998 when a United Airlines plane was waiting
5175
		in the queue at Washington Dulles International
5176
		Airport for take-off to New Orleans (where a Usenix
5177
		conference was taking place), one man stood up from
5178
		his seat, demanded that they stop waiting in the
5179
		queue and be permitted to deplane. Even after orders
5180
		from the crew and a pilot from the cockpit he refused
5181
		to sit down. The plane exited the queue and returned
5182
		to the airport gangway. Security personnel ran onto
5183
		the plane and removed this man, Richard Stallman,
5184
		from the plane. After Richard was removed from the
5185
		plane, everyone else stayed onboard and continued
5186
		their journey to New Orleans. A few OpenBSD developers
5187
		were on that same plane, seated very closeby, so
5188
		we have an accurate story of the events.
5189
		</p><p>
5190
		This is the man who presumes that he should preach
5191
		to us about morality, freedom, and what is best for
5192
		us. He believes it is his God-given role to tell
5193
		us what is best for us, when he has shown that he
5194
		takes actions which are not best for everyone. He
5195
		prefers actions which he thinks are best for him
5196
		-- and him alone -- and then lies to the public.
5197
		Richard Stallman is no Spock.
5198
		</p><p>
5199
		We release our software in ways that are maximally
5200
		free. We remove all restrictions on use and
5201
		distribution, but leave a requirement to be known
5202
		as the authors. We follow a pattern of free source
5203
		code distribution that started in the mid-1980's
5204
		in Berkeley, from before Richard Stallman had any
5205
		powerful influence which he could use so falsely.
5206
		</p><p>
5207
		We have a development sub-tree called "ports". Our
5208
		"ports" tree builds software that is 'found on the
5209
		net' into packages that OpenBSD users can use more
5210
		easily. A scaffold of Makefiles and scripts
5211
		automatically fetch these pieces of software, apply
5212
		patches as required by OpenBSD, and then build them
5213
		into nice neat little tarballs. This is provided
5214
		as a convenience for users. The ports tree is
5215
		maintained by OpenBSD entirely separately from our
5216
		main source tree. Some of the software which is
5217
		fetched and compiled is not as free as we would
5218
		like, but what can we do. All the other operating
5219
		system projects make exactly the same decision, and
5220
		provide these same conveniences to their users.
5221
		</p><p>
5222
		Richard felt that this "ports tree" of ours made
5223
		OpenBSD non-free. He came to our mailing lists and
5224
		lectured to us specifically, yet he said nothing
5225
		to the many other vendors who do the same; many of
5226
		them donate to the FSF and perhaps that has something
5227
		to do with it. Meanwhile, Richard has personally
5228
		made sure that all the official GNU software --
5229
		including Emacs -- compiles and runs on Windows.
5230
		</p><p>
5231
		That man is a false leader. He is a hypocrite. There
5232
		may be some people who listen to him. But we don't
5233
		listen to people who do not follow their own stupid
5234
		rules.
5235
		</p>
5236
	    ]]></desc>
5237
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#43</overview>
5238
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5239
	    <files>
5240
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
5241
		<file>
5242
		    <url>song43.mp3</url>
5243
		    <size>8.2 Mb</size>
5244
		    <length>4 minutes 48 seconds</length>
5245
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5246
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
5247
		</file>
5248
		<file>
5249
		    <url>song43.ogg</url>
5250
		    <size>6.5 Mb</size>
5251
		    <length>4 minutes 48 seconds</length>
5252
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
5253
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
5254
		</file>
5255
	    </files>
5256
	</item>
5257
5258
5259
	<item source="openbsd" added="20071102">
5260
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.2 Release Song - "100001 1010101"</title>
5261
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5262
		<p>
5263
		Those of us who work on OpenBSD are often asked why
5264
		we do what we do. This song's lyrics express the
5265
		core motivations and goals which have remained
5266
		unchanged over the years - secure, free, reliable
5267
		software, that can be shared with anyone. Many other
5268
		projects purport to share these same goals, and
5269
		love to wrap themselves in a banner of "Open Source"
5270
		and "Free Software". Given how many projects there
5271
		are one would think it might be easy to stick to
5272
		those goals, but it doesn't seem to work out that
5273
		way. A variety of desires drag many projects away
5274
		from the ideals very quickly.
5275
		</p><p>
5276
		Much of any operating system's usability depends
5277
		on device support, and there are some very tempting
5278
		alternative ways to support devices available to
5279
		those who will surrender their moral code. A project
5280
		could compromise by entering into NDA agreements
5281
		with vendors, or including binary objects in the
5282
		operating system for which no source code exists,
5283
		or tying their users down with contract terms hidden
5284
		inside copyright notices. All of these choices
5285
		surrender some subset of the ideals, and we simply
5286
		will not do this. Sure, we care about getting devices
5287
		working, but not at the expense of our original
5288
		goals.
5289
		</p><p>
5290
		Of course since "free to share with anyone" is part
5291
		of our goals, we've been at the forefront of many
5292
		licensing and NDA issues, resulting in a good number
5293
		of successes. This success had led to much recognition
5294
		for the advancement of Free Software causes, but
5295
		has also led to other issues.
5296
		</p><p>
5297
		We fully admit that some BSD licensed software has
5298
		been taken and used by many commercial entities,
5299
		but contributions come back more often than people
5300
		seem to know, and when they do, they're always still
5301
		properly attributed to the original authors, and
5302
		given back in the same spirit that they were given
5303
		in the first place.
5304
		</p><p>
5305
		That's the best we can expect from companies. After
5306
		all, we make our stuff so free so that everyone can
5307
		benefit -- it remains a core goal; we really have
5308
		not strayed at all in 10 years. But we can expect
5309
		more from projects who talk about sharing -- such
5310
		as the various Linux projects.
5311
		</p><p>
5312
		Now rather than seeing us as friends who can
5313
		cooperatively improve all codebases, we are seen
5314
		as foes who oppose the GPL. The participants of
5315
		"the race" are being manipulated by the FSF and
5316
		their legal arm, the SFLC, for the FSF's aims,
5317
		rather than the goal of getting good source into
5318
		Linux (and all other code bases). We don't want
5319
		this to come off as some conspiracy theory, but we
5320
		simply urge those developers caution -- they should
5321
		ensure that the path they are being shown by those
5322
		who have positioned themselves as leaders is still
5323
		true. Run for yourself, not for their agenda.
5324
		</p><p>
5325
		The Race is there to be run, for ourselves, not for
5326
		others. We do what we do to run our own race, and
5327
		finish it the best we can. We don't rush off at
5328
		every distraction, or worry how this will affect
5329
		our image. We are here to have fun doing right.
5330
		</p>
5331
	    ]]></desc>
5332
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#42</overview>
5333
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5334
	    <files>
5335
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
5336
		<file>
5337
		    <url>song42.mp3</url>
5338
		    <size>4.0 Mb</size>
5339
		    <length>4 minutes 40 seconds</length>
5340
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5341
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
5342
		</file>
5343
		<file>
5344
		    <url>song42.ogg</url>
5345
		    <size>6.4 Mb</size>
5346
		    <length>4 minutes 4- seconds</length>
5347
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
5348
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
5349
		</file>
5350
	    </files>
5351
	</item>
5352
5353
	<item source="openbsd" added="20070502">
5354
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.1 Release Song - Puffy Baba and the 40 Vendors</title>
5355
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5356
		<p>
5357
		As developers of a free operating system, one of
5358
		our prime responsibilities is device support. No
5359
		matter how nice an operating system is, it remains
5360
		useless and unusable without solid support for a
5361
		wide percentage of the hardware that is available
5362
		on the market. It is therefore rather unsurprising
5363
		that more than half of our efforts focus on various
5364
		aspects relating to device support.
5365
		</p><p>
5366
		Most parts of the operating system (from low kernel,
5367
		through to libraries, all the way up to X, and then
5368
		even to applications) use fairly obvious interface
5369
		layers, where the "communication protocols" or
5370
		"argument passing" mechanisms (ie. APIs) can be
5371
		understood by any developer who takes the time to
5372
		read the free code. Device drivers pose an additional
5373
		and significant challenge though: because many
5374
		vendors refuse to document the exact behavior of
5375
		their devices.  The devices are black boxes. And
5376
		often they are surprisingly weird, or even buggy.
5377
		</p><p>
5378
		When vendor documentation does not exist, the
5379
		development process can become extremely hairy.
5380
		Groups of developers have found themselves focused
5381
		for months at a time, figuring out the most simple
5382
		steps, simply because the hardware is a complete
5383
		mystery. Access to documentation can ease these
5384
		difficulties rapidly. However, getting access to
5385
		the chip documentation from vendors is ... almost
5386
		always a negotiation. If we had open access to
5387
		documentation, anyone would be able to see how
5388
		simple all these devices actually are, and device
5389
		driver development would flourish (and not just in
5390
		OpenBSD, either).
5391
		</p><p>
5392
		When we proceed into negotiations with vendors,
5393
		asking for documentation, our position is often
5394
		weak. One would assume that the modern market is
5395
		fair, and that selling chips would be the primary
5396
		focus of these vendors. But unfortunately a number
5397
		of behemoth software vendors have spent the last
5398
		10 or 20 years building <a
5399
		href="http://www.openbsd.org/papers/brhard2007/mgp00024.html">political
5400
		hurdles against the smaller players</a>.
5401
		</p><p>
5402
		A particularly nasty player in this regard has been
5403
		the Linux vendors and some Linux developers, who
5404
		have played along with an American corporate model
5405
		of requiring NDAs for chip documentation. This has
5406
		effectively put Linux into the club with Microsoft,
5407
		but has left all the other operating system communities
5408
		-- and their developers -- with much less available
5409
		clout for requesting documentation. In a more fair
5410
		world, the Linux vendors would work with us, and
5411
		the device driver support in all free operating
5412
		systems would be fantastic by now.
5413
		</p><p>
5414
		We only ask that <a
5415
		href="http://www.openbsd.org/papers/brhard2007/mgp00027.html">users
5416
		help</a> us in changing the political landscape.
5417
		</p>
5418
	    ]]></desc>
5419
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#41</overview>
5420
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5421
	    <files>
5422
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
5423
		<file>
5424
		    <url>song41.mp3</url>
5425
		    <size>4.1 Mb</size>
5426
		    <length>4 minutes 19 seconds</length>
5427
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5428
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
5429
		</file>
5430
		<file>
5431
		    <url>song41.ogg</url>
5432
		    <size>8.3 Mb</size>
5433
		    <length>4 minutes 19 seconds</length>
5434
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
5435
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
5436
		</file>
5437
	    </files>
5438
	</item>
5439
5440
5441
	<item source="openbsd" added="20061010">
5442
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.0 Release Song - Humppa negala</title>
5443
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5444
		<p>
5445
		The last 10 years, every 6 month period has (without
5446
		fail) resulted in an official OpenBSD release making
5447
		it to the FTP servers. But CDs are also manufactured,
5448
		which the project sells to continue our development
5449
		goals.
5450
		</p><p>
5451
		While tests of the release binaries are done by
5452
		developers around the world, Theo and some developers
5453
		from Calgary or Edmonton (such as Peter Valchev or
5454
		Bob Beck) test that the discs are full of (only)
5455
		correct code. Ty Semaka works for approximately two
5456
		months to design and draw artwork that will fit the
5457
		designated theme, and coordinates with his music
5458
		buddies to write and record a song that also matches
5459
		the theme.
5460
		</p><p>
5461
		Then the discs and all the artwork gets delivered
5462
		to the plant, so that they can be pressed in time
5463
		for an official release date.
5464
		</p><p>
5465
		This release, instead of bemoaning vendors or
5466
		organizations that try to make our task of writing
5467
		free software more difficult, we instead celebrate
5468
		the 10 years that we have been given (so far) to
5469
		write free software, express our themes in art, and
5470
		the 5 years that we have made music with a group
5471
		of talented musicians.
5472
		</p><p>
5473
		OpenBSD developers have been torturing each other
5474
		for years now with Humppa-style music, so this
5475
		release our users get a taste of this too. Sometimes
5476
		at hackathons you will hear the same songs being
5477
		played on multiple laptops, out of sync. It is under
5478
		such duress that much of our code gets written.
5479
		</p><p>
5480
		We feel like Pufferix and Bobilix delivering The
5481
		Three Discs of Freedom to those who want them
5482
		whenever the need arises, then returning to celebrate
5483
		the (unlocked) source tree with all the other
5484
		developers.
5485
		</p><p>
5486
		For RSS readers: Please note that the download URL
5487
		is an FTP site.
5488
		</p>
5489
	    ]]></desc>
5490
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#40</overview>
5491
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
5492
	    <files>
5493
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
5494
		<file>
5495
		    <url>song40.mp3</url>
5496
		    <size>2.3 Mb</size>
5497
		    <length>2 minutes 40 seconds</length>
5498
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5499
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
5500
		</file>
5501
		<file>
5502
		    <url>song40.ogg</url>
5503
		    <size>3.6 Mb</size>
5504
		    <length>2 minutes 40 seconds</length>
5505
		    <desc>Ogg version</desc>
5506
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
5507
		</file>
5508
	    </files>
5509
	</item>
5510
5511
5512
	<!-- Source: EuroBSDCon
5513
	-->
5514
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20061114">
5515
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures</title>
5516
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures by Christian Laursen</desc>
5517
	    <overview>http://photos.borderworlds.dk/eurobsdcon-2006/</overview>
5518
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2006,photos,christian laursen</tags>
5519
	</item>
5520
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20061114">
5521
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures</title>
5522
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures by Erwin Lansing (erwin@)</desc>
5523
	    <overview>http://foto.droso.org/2006/20061108-13/</overview>
5524
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,eurobsdcon2006,photos,erwin lansing</tags>
5525
	</item>
5526
5527
	<!-- Source: openfest
5528
	-->
5529
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5530
	    <title>OpenFest 2005 Videos</title>
5531
	    <desc>Various videos of OpenFest 2005 (Bulgarian)</desc>
5532
	    <overview>http://archive2005.openfest.org/Video/BSDCon/</overview>
5533
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2005,presentation</tags>
5534
	    <files>
5535
		<prefix>http://archive2005.openfest.org/Video/BSDCon/</prefix>
5536
		<file>
5537
		    <url>01_FreeBSD_Jails-Deyan_Dyankov.avi</url>
5538
		    <size>13 Mb</size>
5539
		    <desc>FreeBSD Jails - Deyan Dyankov</desc>
5540
		    <tags>freebsd,jail,avi,deyan dyankov</tags>
5541
		</file>
5542
		<file>
5543
		    <url>02_Embedding_BSD_Ivo_Vachkov.avi</url>
5544
		    <size>345 Mb</size>
5545
		    <desc>Embedding BSD - Ivo Vachkov</desc>
5546
		    <tags>embedded systems,avi,ivo vachkov</tags>
5547
		</file>
5548
		<file>
5549
		    <url>03-QoS,etc_with_OpenBSD_pf-Mihail_Paunov.avi</url>
5550
		    <size>501 Mb</size>
5551
		    <desc>QoS etc with OpenBSD pf</desc>
5552
		    <tags>openbsd,qos,pf,avi,mihail paunov</tags>
5553
		</file>
5554
		<file>
5555
		    <url>04-Route_and_firewall_redundancy_using_CARP_and_pfsync-Atanas_Bachvarov.avi</url>
5556
		    <size>153 Mb</size>
5557
		    <desc>Route and firewall redundancy using CARP and pfsync - Atanas Bachvarov</desc>
5558
		    <tags>carp,pfsync,avi,atanas bachvarov</tags>
5559
		</file>
5560
		<file>
5561
		    <url>05-Official_Bulgarian_FreeBSD_Mirror-Dimiter_Vasilev.avi</url>
5562
		    <size>411 Mb</size>
5563
		    <desc>Offical Bulgarian FreeBSD Mirror - Dimiter Vasilev</desc>
5564
		    <tags>freebsd,mirror,avi,dimiter vasilev</tags>
5565
		</file>
5566
		<file>
5567
		    <url>06-DIY_FreeBSD_Port-Peter_Pentchev.avi</url>
5568
		    <size>326 Mb</size>
5569
		    <desc>DIY FreeBSD Port</desc>
5570
		    <tags>freebsd,ports,avi,peter pentchev</tags>
5571
		</file>
5572
	    </files>
5573
	</item>
5574
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5575
	    <title>Discussion - What's cooking for FreeBSD 7.0?</title>
5576
	    <desc>Discussion - What's cooking for FreeBSD 7.0? (Bulgarian)</desc>
5577
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5578
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,discussion,freebsd,freebsd7</tags>
5579
	    <files>
5580
		<file>
5581
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l7.avi</url>
5582
		    <size>105 Mb</size>
5583
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5584
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5585
		</file>
5586
	    </files>
5587
	</item>
5588
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5589
	    <title>Dimitri Vasileva - Visualizing Security Threats with Social Networking Software</title>
5590
	    <desc>Dimitri Vasileva - Visualizing Security Threats with Social Networking Software (Bulgarian)</desc>
5591
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5592
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,security,social networking,dimitri vasileva</tags>
5593
	    <files>
5594
		<file>
5595
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l6.avi</url>
5596
		    <size>331 Mb</size>
5597
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5598
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5599
		</file>
5600
	    </files>
5601
	</item>
5602
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5603
	    <title>Shcheryana Shopova - SNMP monitoring</title>
5604
	    <desc>Shcheryana Shopova - SNMP monitoring (Bulgarian)</desc>
5605
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5606
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,snmp,monitoring,shcheryana shopova</tags>
5607
	    <files>
5608
		<file>
5609
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l5.avi</url>
5610
		    <size>271 Mb</size>
5611
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5612
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5613
		</file>
5614
	    </files>
5615
	</item>
5616
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5617
	    <title>Willow Vachkov - FreeBSD and the new network and transport protocols (IPv6 and SCTP)</title>
5618
	    <desc>Willow Vachkov - FreeBSD and the new network and transport protocols (IPv6 and SCTP) (Bulgarian)</desc>
5619
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5620
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,ipv6,sctp,willow vanchkov</tags>
5621
	    <files>
5622
		<file>
5623
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l4.avi</url>
5624
		    <size>251 Mb</size>
5625
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5626
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5627
		</file>
5628
	    </files>
5629
	</item>
5630
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5631
	    <title>Atanas Bchvarov - Packet Filtering in FreeBSD</title>
5632
	    <desc>Atanas Bchvarov - Packet Filtering in FreeBSD (Bulgarian)</desc>
5633
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5634
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,atanas bchvarov</tags>
5635
	    <files>
5636
		<file>
5637
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l3.avi</url>
5638
		    <size>186 Mb</size>
5639
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5640
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5641
		</file>
5642
	    </files>
5643
	</item>
5644
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5645
	    <title>Nikolai Denev - FreeBSD goes Zettabyte</title>
5646
	    <desc>Nikolai Denev - FreeBSD goes Zettabyte (Bulgarian)</desc>
5647
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5648
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,zettabyte,nikolai denev</tags>
5649
	    <files>
5650
		<file>
5651
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l2.avi</url>
5652
		    <size>358 Mb</size>
5653
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5654
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5655
		</file>
5656
	    </files>
5657
	</item>
5658
	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
5659
	    <title>Vasil Dimov - The FreeBSD ports collection - tips and tricks</title>
5660
	    <desc>Vasil Dimov - The FreeBSD ports collection - tips and tricks (Bulgarian)</desc>
5661
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
5662
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,ports collection,vasil dimov</tags>
5663
	    <files>
5664
		<file>
5665
		    <url>http://ludost.net/of2007/d2h2l1.avi</url>
5666
		    <size>341 Mb</size>
5667
		    <desc>AVI</desc>
5668
		    <tags>avi</tags>
5669
		</file>
5670
	    </files>
5671
	</item>
5672
	<item source="openfest" added="20070115">
5673
	    <title>FreeBSD ports Erwin Lansing</title>
5674
	    <desc>Case study : managing a worldwide open source project: FreeBSD port manager</desc>
5675
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program/</overview>
5676
	    <tags>openfest,openfest2006,presentation,freebsd,port manager,erwin lansing</tags>
5677
	    <files>
5678
		<file>
5679
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~erwin/presentations/FreeBSD-portmgr-20061105-OpenFest.pdf</url>
5680
		    <size>128 Kb</size>
5681
		    <desc>PDF</desc>
5682
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2261
		</file>
5683
		</file>
5684
	    </files>
5685
	</item>
5686
5687
	<!-- Source: The Linux Link Tech Show
5688
	-->
5689
	<item source="tllts" added="20070217">
5690
	    <title>The Linux Link Tech Show Episode 179</title>
5691
	    <desc>
5692
		Special Guests Will Backman and Scott Ruecker.
5693
		Will's talks about his podcast bsdtalk and about
5694
		Linux and BSD in general. We are joined by Troels
5695
		also. Dann on Devede and hopes for MythTV. Scott
5696
		Ruecker talks about Scale and general linux and
5697
		lxer stuff.
5698
	    </desc>
5699
	    <tags>linux link tech show,talk,will backman</tags>
5700
	    <files>
2262
		<file>
5701
		<file>
2263
		    <url>1.7.mp3</url>
5702
		    <url>http://www.tllts.org/audio/tllts_179-02-14-07.mp3</url>
2264
		    <size>12 Mb</size>
5703
		    <size>31 Mb</size>
2265
		    <desc>Russell Sutherland: BSD on the Edge of the Enterprise.</desc>
5704
		    <length>120 minutes</length>
2266
		    <tags>mp3,russel sutherland</tags>
5705
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
5706
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2267
		</file>
5707
		</file>
5708
	    </files>
5709
	</item>
5710
5711
	<!-- Source: Ottawa Amateur Radio Club
5712
	-->
5713
	<item source="oarc" added="20070219">
5714
	    <title>Ham Radio on FreeBSD</title>
5715
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5716
		<p>
5717
		Last month I attended a meeting of the Ottawa Amateur
5718
		Radio Club (<a href="http://www.oarc.net/">OARC</a>)
5719
		as a member of my local BUG was giving a presentation
5720
		on Ham Radio on FreeBSD. <a
5721
		href="http://www.db.net/~db/about.html">Diane
5722
		Bruce</a>, call sign VA3DB, has had her operator
5723
		license since 1969 and is well known in the BSD
5724
		community and for the development of ircd-hybrid.
5725
		In the past year she has assisted in the creation
5726
		of the <a
5727
		href="http://www.freshports.org/hamradio/">Hamradio
5728
		category in the FreeBSD ports tree</a> and has
5729
		become the maintainer of over 20 of the hamradio
5730
		ports.  She also contributed to the <a
5731
		href="http://www.hamsexy.com/wiki/index.php?title=FreeBSD&redirect=no">FreeBSD
5732
		entry at Hampedia</a>, the Wikipedia for ham
5733
		operators.
5734
		</p><p>
5735
		Her presentation slides are a great introduction
5736
		to the various ham utilities which are available,
5737
		including both descriptions and screenshots of the
5738
		utilities in action.
5739
		</p>
5740
	    ]]></desc>
5741
	    <tags>oarc,presentation,radio,diane bruce</tags>
5742
	    <files>
2268
		<file>
5743
		<file>
2269
		    <url>1.8.mp3</url>
5744
		    <url>http://www.oarc.net/hamradio_on_freebsd.pdf</url>
2270
		    <size>5 Mb</size>
5745
		    <size>23 pages</size>
2271
		    <desc>Jason Dixon: BSD Is Dying.</desc>
5746
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2272
		    <tags>mp3,humor,bsd is dying,jason dixon</tags>
5747
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2273
		</file>
5748
		</file>
5749
	    </files>
5750
	</item>
5751
5752
	<!-- Source: Linux and FreeBSD video tutorials. For everyone.
5753
	-->
5754
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5755
	    <title>Installing OpenBSD in 5 minutes</title>
5756
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/04/installing-openbsd-in-5-minutes.html</overview>
5757
	    <desc>
5758
		Installing OpenBSD. In real time :)
5759
	    </desc>
5760
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,openbsd</tags>
5761
	</item>
5762
5763
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5764
	    <title>FreeBSD: Hard disk encryption</title>
5765
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/02/freebsd-hard-disk-encryption.html</overview>
5766
	    <desc>
5767
		How to protect your data on FreeBSD machine even
5768
		when your computer is turned off? This hard disk
5769
		encryption guide will help.
5770
	    </desc>
5771
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd,encryption</tags>
5772
	</item>
5773
5774
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5775
	    <title>FreeBSD: First time install and configure</title>
5776
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/01/freebsd-first-time-install-and.html</overview>
5777
	    <desc>
5778
		Tutorial how to install and configure FreeBSD. It
5779
		seems that comments in video are in Japanese :)
5780
	    </desc>
5781
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd</tags>
5782
	</item>
5783
5784
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5785
	    <title>FreeBSD: using ports system</title>
5786
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/01/freebsd-using-ports-system.html</overview>
5787
	    <desc>
5788
		Using ports system in FreeBSD to install etherape.
5789
	    </desc>
5790
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd,ports</tags>
5791
	</item>
5792
5793
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5794
	    <title>FreeBSD installation</title>
5795
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/01/freebsd-installation.html</overview>
5796
	    <desc>
5797
		Step-by-step installation of FreeBSD operating system.
5798
	    </desc>
5799
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd</tags>
5800
	</item>
5801
5802
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5803
	    <title>NetBSD and ssshfs</title>
5804
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/04/netbsd-and-ssshfs.html</overview>
5805
	    <desc>
5806
		Usage of ssshfs on NetBSD with PUFFS.
5807
	    </desc>
5808
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,netbsd,puffs</tags>
5809
	</item>
5810
5811
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
5812
	    <title>Install Debian and NetBSD on Xen Domu</title>
5813
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/04/install-debian-and-netbsd-on-xen-domu.html</overview>
5814
	    <desc>
5815
		Video tutorial on installation of Debian and NetBsd on Domu with Xen.
5816
	    </desc>
5817
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,netbsd,xen,debian</tags>
5818
	</item>
5819
5820
	<!-- Berklix.com Computer Services
5821
	-->
5822
	<item source="berklix" added="20070516">
5823
	    <title>NetBSD. More CPUs than Linux. + BSD ports/packages.</title>
5824
	    <overview>http://www.berklix.com/free/talk/presentations/export/3_netbsd_marc/</overview>
5825
	    <desc>
5826
		From the talks with subject "Free Alternatives To
5827
		Microsoft" comes "NetBSD. More CPUs than Linux. +
5828
		BSD ports/packages.".
5829
	    </desc>
5830
	    <tags>berklix,netbsd,packages</tags>
5831
	</item>
5832
5833
	<!-- linuxreality.com
5834
	-->
5835
	<item source="linuxreality" added="20070820">
5836
	    <title>Interview with Will Backman</title>
5837
	    <overview>http://www.linuxreality.com/podcast/episode-74-interview-with-will-backman/</overview>
5838
	    <desc>
5839
		In this episode: an interview with the host of the
5840
		BSDTalk Podcast, Will Backman, in which we talk
5841
		about the history of the BSD's, including FreeBSD,
5842
		NetBSD, OpenBSD, DragonflyBSD, PC-BSD, and DesktopBSD,
5843
		and discuss some of the goals and features of these
5844
		projects.
5845
	    </desc>
5846
	    <tags>linux reality,bsdtalk,interview,will backman</tags>
5847
	    <files>
2274
		<file>
5848
		<file>
2275
		    <url>2.1.mp3</url>
5849
		    <url>http://media.libsyn.com/media/linuxreality/linuxreality074.mp3</url>
2276
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
5850
		    <length>48 minutes</length>
2277
		    <desc>Jason Wright: OpenBSD on sparc64.</desc>
5851
		    <size>21 Mb</size>
2278
		    <tags>mp3,openbsd,sparc64,jason wright</tags>
5852
		    <desc>MP3 file</desc>
5853
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2279
		</file>
5854
		</file>
5855
	    </files>
5856
	</item>
5857
	<item source="linuxreality" added="20070830">
5858
	    <title>BSD Wrap-Up</title>
5859
	    <overview>http://www.linuxreality.com/podcast/episode-75-bsd-wrap-up/</overview>
5860
	    <desc>
5861
		In this episode: OReilly discount code for Linux
5862
		Reality listeners available on the LR website; a
5863
		new Linux Reality contest where one can win a
5864
		listener-donated book, LPI Certification in a
5865
		Nutshell, for the best audio Listener Tip sent in
5866
		between now and the end of November; a new podcast
5867
		client I am developing in Python; petition to open
5868
		source the Main Actor video editing software; a
5869
		call for guest podcasts; a brief wrap-up discussion
5870
		of my adventures with the BSD's; audio and email
5871
		listener feedback.
5872
	    </desc>
5873
	    <tags>linux reality</tags>
5874
	    <files>
2280
		<file>
5875
		<file>
2281
		    <url>2.2.mp3</url>
5876
		    <url>http://media.libsyn.com/media/linuxreality/linuxreality075.mp3</url>
2282
		    <size>15 Mb</size>
5877
		    <length>48 minutes</length>
2283
		    <desc>Kristaps Johnson: BSD Virtualisation with sysjail.</desc>
5878
		    <size>21 Mb</size>
2284
		    <tags>mp3,sysjail,kristaps johnson</tags>
5879
		    <desc>MP3 file</desc>
5880
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2285
		</file>
5881
		</file>
5882
	    </files>
5883
	</item>
5884
5885
	<!-- sitescollide.com
5886
	-->
5887
5888
	<item source="sitescollide" added="20070820">
5889
	    <title>OpenBSD Road Warrior - Felix Kronlage</title>
5890
	    <overview>http://www.sitescollide.com/Podcast/CD527090-CAAC-4BEC-ACC1-2E3FC930DC80.html</overview>
5891
	    <desc>
5892
		On this Sites Collide, we speak with Felix Kronlage
5893
		of the OpenBSD Project about using Open-Source tools
5894
		for effectively and securely getting work done while
5895
		using your laptop outside your home or office (called
5896
		a Road Warrior). If you use a laptop on the road,
5897
		you NEED to hear this episode.
5898
	    </desc>
5899
	    <tags>sitescollide,interview,openbsd,road warrior,felix kronlage</tags>
5900
	    <files>
2286
		<file>
5901
		<file>
2287
		    <url>2.3.mp3</url>
5902
		    <url>http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/SitesCollide/~5/142146005/scr012-1.mp3</url>
5903
		    <length>40 minutes</length>
2288
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
5904
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
2289
		    <desc>Wietse Venema: Postfix as a Secure Programming Example.</desc>
5905
		    <desc>MP3 file</desc>
2290
		    <tags>mp3,postfix,wietse venema</tags>
5906
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2291
		</file>
5907
		</file>
5908
	    </files>
5909
	</item>
5910
5911
	<item source="sitescollide" added="20070820">
5912
	    <title>What is OpenBSD - Wim Vandeputte</title>
5913
	    <overview>http://www.sitescollide.com/Podcast/C8F1C6F7-72B1-4E47-B51A-42212989BF19.html</overview>
5914
	    <desc>
5915
		In this episode of Sites Collide, Wim Vandeputte
5916
		of the OpenBSD project joins us to educate us about
5917
		OpenBSD. We talk about a brief history, as well as
5918
		where you can find it running today. If you don't
5919
		know the difference between BSD and Linux, you need
5920
		to hear this episode!!
5921
	    </desc>
5922
	    <tags>sitescollide,interview,openbsd,wim vandeputte</tags>
5923
	    <files>
2292
		<file>
5924
		<file>
2293
		    <url>2.4.mp3</url>
5925
		    <url>http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/SitesCollide/~5/136752314/scr010.mp3</url>
2294
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
5926
		    <length>46 minutes</length>
2295
		    <desc>Bob Beck: spamd - spam deferral daemon.</desc>
5927
		    <size>18 Mb</size>
2296
		    <tags>mp3,spamd,bob beck</tags>
5928
		    <desc>MP3 file</desc>
5929
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2297
		</file>
5930
		</file>
2298
	    </files>
5931
	    </files>
2299
	</item>
5932
	</item>
2300
5933
2301
	<item source="nycbug" added="20060909">
5934
	<item source="sitescollide" added="20070820">
2302
	    <title>Isaac `Ike` Levy on m0n0wall and PFSense</title>
5935
	    <title>OpenBSD Networking - Henning Brauer</title>
2303
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5936
	    <overview>http://www.sitescollide.com/Podcast/B50EE425-0C8B-4AF2-AD70-CD2C98D091B3.html</overview>
2304
		UNIX professionals are busy these days. Setting up
5937
	    <desc>
2305
		routers and firewalls are fundamental to any network,
5938
		In this episode of Sites Collide, we discuss Open
2306
		but in environments where the focus is on various
5939
		BGPd and OpenBSD as well as other routing-related
2307
		applications, (servers, workstations, and the
5940
		topics with developer, network guru, and conference
2308
		software that runs on them), it`s difficult for a
5941
		speaker, Henning Brauer of the OpenBSD Project. So,
2309
		business not to choose off-the-shelf SOHO routers
5942
		if you are interested in the technologies that make
2310
		and networking gear. The web management gui`s are
5943
		the Internet work, or you're looking to learn about
2311
		understandable by everyone, (even techs without
5944
		Unix/Linux, this show is for you!
2312
		UNIX knowledge), and the gear is cheap - this saves
2313
		time and money.
2314
		<br>
2315
		In the meantime, the features of your average Linksys
2316
		or Netgear router often leave MUCH to be desired,
2317
		(https auth management, for one simple example).
2318
		<br>
2319
		Enter m0n0wall and PFSense, 2 BSD based packaged
2320
		router/firewall solutions that are as solid and
2321
		full featured as you`d expect from any BSD system-
2322
		PLUS THEY HAVE HTML WEB INTERFACES FOR MANAGEMENT!
2323
		<br>
2324
		m0n0wall and PFSense become an easy sell in any
2325
		small professional enviornment, any competent tech
2326
		can manage the network within minutes... At home,
2327
		in every hackers home network, they free the hacker
2328
		to have trusted tools available, but are as time-saving
2329
		as using any Linksys router.
2330
		<br>
2331
		m0n0wall and PFSense are both light and clean,
2332
		designed to run on embedded systems- (Soekris,
2333
		WRAP), but are monsters when unleashed on even
2334
		legacy PC`s around the office. If you manage UNIX
2335
		networks and systems all day, do you really want
2336
		to manage the router for your DSL when you get home?
2337
		But then doesn`t it bug you to use a chincey Linksys
2338
		box?
2339
		<br>
2340
		Ike has been a member of NYC*BUG since we first
2341
		launched in January 2004. He is a long-time member
2342
		of the Lower East Side Mac Unix User Group. He has
2343
		spoken frequently on a number of topics at various
2344
		venues, particularly on the issue of FreeBSD`s jail
2345
		(8).
2346
		]]>
2347
	    </desc>
5945
	    </desc>
2348
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,monowall,pfsense,isaac levy</tags>
5946
	    <tags>sitescollide,interview,openbsd,openbgpd,henning brauer</tags>
5947
	    <files>
5948
		<file>
5949
		    <url>http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/SitesCollide/~5/136752318/scr08.mp3</url>
5950
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
5951
		    <size>8 Mb</size>
5952
		    <desc>MP3 file</desc>
5953
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
5954
		</file>
5955
	    </files>
5956
	</item>
5957
5958
	<!-- BSDCan
5959
	-->
5960
5961
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080528">
5962
	    <title>Daniel Braniss</title>
5963
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/102.en.html</overview>
5964
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5965
		<h1>iSCSI</h1>
5966
		<i>not an Apple appliance.</i>
5967
		<p>
5968
		iSCSI is not an Apple appliance.
5969
		</p><p>
5970
		The i in iSCSI stands for internet, some say for
5971
		insecure, personally I like to think interesting.
5972
		I'll try to share the road followed from RFC-3720
5973
		to the actual working driver, the challenges, the
5974
		frustrations.
5975
		</p>
5976
	    ]]></desc>
5977
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,presentation,iscsi,daniel braniss</tags>
5978
	    <files>
5979
		<file>
5980
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/65_bsdcan.pdf</url>
5981
		    <length>30 pages</length>
5982
		    <size>1.4 Mb</size>
5983
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
5984
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
5985
		</file>
5986
	    </files>
5987
	</item>
5988
5989
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080528">
5990
	    <title>Scott Ullrich, Chris Buechler - pfSense Tutorial</title>
5991
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/80.en.html</overview>
5992
	    <desc><![CDATA[
5993
		<h1>pfSense Tutorial</h1>
5994
		<i>From Zero to Hero with pfSense</i>
5995
		<p>
5996
		pfSense is a free, open source customized distribution
5997
		of FreeBSD tailored for use as a firewall and router.
5998
		In addition to being a powerful, flexible firewalling
5999
		and routing platform, it includes a long list of
6000
		related features and a package system allowing
6001
		further expandability without adding bloat and
6002
		potential security vulnerabilities to the base
6003
		distribution. pfSense is a popular project with
6004
		more than 1 million downloads since its inception,
6005
		and proven in countless installations ranging from
6006
		small home networks protecting a PC and an Xbox to
6007
		large corporations, universities and other organizations
6008
		protecting thousands of network devices.
6009
		</p><p>
6010
		This tutorial is being presented by the founders
6011
		of the pfSense project, Chris Buechler and Scott
6012
		Ullrich.
6013
		</p><p>
6014
		The session will start with an introduction to the
6015
		project, hardware sizing and selection, installation,
6016
		firewalling concepts and basic configuration, and
6017
		continue to cover all the most popular features of
6018
		the system. Common usage scenarios, deployment
6019
		considerations, step by step configuration guidance,
6020
		and best practices will be covered for each feature.
6021
		Most configurations will be demonstrated in a live
6022
		lab environment.
6023
		</p><p>
6024
		Attendees are assumed to have basic knowledge of
6025
		TCP/IP and firewalling concepts, however no in-depth
6026
		knowledge in these areas or prior knowledge of
6027
		pfSense or FreeBSD is necessary.
6028
		</p>
6029
	    ]]></desc>
6030
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,tutorial,freebsd,pfsense,scott ullrich,chris buechler</tags>
2349
	    <files>
6031
	    <files>
2350
		<file>
6032
		<file>
2351
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-09-06-06.mp3</url>
6033
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/66_pfSenseTutorial.pdf</url>
2352
		    <size>9 Mb</size>
6034
		    <length>91 pages</length>
2353
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
6035
		    <size>4.1 Kb</size>
6036
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6037
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2354
		</file>
6038
		</file>
2355
	    </files>
6039
	    </files>
2356
	</item>
6040
	</item>
2357
6041
2358
	<item source="nycbug" added="20060807">
6042
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080528">
2359
	    <title>Alfred Perlstein on Sendmail Hacks</title>
6043
	    <title>Bjoern A. Zeeb - BSDCan08 devsummit summary</title>
2360
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6044
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~bz/200805DevSummit/</overview>
2361
		 Alfred will discuss the hacks used to turn Sendmail into a high performance solution for delivering millions of messages to OKCupid`s subscribers. Topics covered will be system tuning and sendmail hacks used in house to achieve massive throughput.
6045
	    <desc>
2362
		 <br>
6046
		200805DevSummit - BSDCan 2008 FreeBSD Developer summit summary
2363
		 Alfred Perlstein is the CTO of OKcupid.com, the largest free online dating site. He has been a FreeBSD hacker for five years, he`s worked on NFS, VFS, pthreads, networking and general system maintenance during his tenure on both FreeBSD and OS X kernels.
2364
		]]>
2365
	    </desc>
6047
	    </desc>
2366
	    <tags>nycbug,presentation,sendmail,alfred perlstein</tags>
6048
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,devsummit,devsummit2008,freebsd,writeup,bjoern a zeeb</tags>
6049
	</item>
6050
6051
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
6052
	    <title>Rafal Jaworowski - FreeBSD Embedded Report</title>
6053
	    <overview>http://wiki.freebsd.org/200805DevSummit</overview>
6054
	    <desc>
6055
		FreeBSD Embedded Report
6056
	    </desc>
6057
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,devsummit,devsummit2008,freebsd,embedded,rafal jaworowski</tags>
2367
	    <files>
6058
	    <files>
2368
		<file>
6059
		<file>
2369
		    <url>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/nycbug-07-05-06.mp3</url>
6060
		    <url><![CDATA[http://wiki.freebsd.org/200805DevSummit?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=devsummit-200805-embedded_summary.pdf]]></url>
2370
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
6061
		    <length>6 pages</length>
2371
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
6062
		    <size>58 Kb</size>
6063
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6064
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2372
		</file>
6065
		</file>
2373
	    </files>
6066
	    </files>
2374
	</item>
6067
	</item>
2375
6068
2376
	<!-- Source: FreeBSD for All
6069
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
2377
	-->
6070
	    <title>Robert Watson - TCP SMP Scalability</title>
2378
6071
	    <overview>http://wiki.freebsd.org/200805DevSummit</overview>
2379
	<item source="f4all" added="20061127">
2380
	    <title>Episode 08 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
2381
	    <desc>
6072
	    <desc>
2382
		 This week we talk about some tips, latest news, Press Coverage and yes, some jazz.
6073
		TCP SMP Scalability
2383
	    </desc>
6074
	    </desc>
2384
	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/11/episode-08.html</overview>
6075
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,devsummit,devsummit2008,freebsd,smp,robert watson</tags>
2385
	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk</tags>
2386
	    <files>
6076
	    <files>
2387
		<prefix>http://dl01.blastpodcast.com/freebsdforall/</prefix>
2388
		<file>
6077
		<file>
2389
		    <url>15403_1164691046.mp3</url>
6078
		    <url><![CDATA[http://wiki.freebsd.org/200805DevSummit?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=20080515-stack-parallelism.pdf]]></url>
2390
		    <size>18 Mb</size>
6079
		    <length>8 pages</length>
2391
		    <desc>128 kbps MP3 version</desc>
6080
		    <size>70 Kb</size>
2392
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
6081
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6082
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2393
		</file>
6083
		</file>
2394
	    </files>
6084
	    </files>
2395
	</item>
6085
	</item>
2396
6086
2397
	<item source="f4all" added="20060727">
6087
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080524">
2398
	    <title>Episode 07 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
6088
	    <title>Erwin Lansing - What's happening in the world of ports and portmgr</title>
6089
	    <overview>http://wiki.freebsd.org/200805DevSummit</overview>
2399
	    <desc>
6090
	    <desc>
2400
		 This week we talk about podcast clients, ipfw firewall etc.
6091
		What's happening in the world of ports and portmgr
2401
	    </desc>
6092
	    </desc>
2402
	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/07/episode-07.html</overview>
6093
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,devsummit,devsummit2008,freebsd,portmgr,erwin lansing</tags>
2403
	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk,podcast clients,ipfw</tags>
2404
	    <files>
6094
	    <files>
2405
		<prefix>http://www.archive.org/download/FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07/</prefix>
2406
		<file>
6095
		<file>
2407
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07.mp3</url>
6096
		    <url><![CDATA[http://wiki.freebsd.org/200805DevSummit?action=AttachFile&do=get&amp;target=portmgr-BSDCan2008.pdf]]></url>
2408
		    <size>11 Mb</size>
6097
		    <length>14 pages</length>
2409
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
6098
		    <size>146 Kb</size>
2410
		    <desc>128 kbps MP3 version</desc>
6099
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2411
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
6100
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2412
		</file>
6101
		</file>
6102
	    </files>
6103
	</item>
6104
6105
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
6106
	    <title>Kern Sibbald - Bacula</title>
6107
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/96.en.html</overview>
6108
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6109
		<h1>Bacula</h1>
6110
		<i>The Open Source Enterprise Backup Solution</i>
6111
		<p>
6112
		The Bacula project started in January 2000 with
6113
		several goals, one of which was the ability to
6114
		backup any client from a Palm to a mainframe computer.
6115
		Bacula is available under a GPL license.
6116
		</p><p>
6117
		Bacula uses several distinct components, each
6118
		communicating via TCP/IP, to achieve a very scalable
6119
		and robust solution to backups.
6120
		</p><p>
6121
		Kern is one of the original project founders and
6122
		still one of the most productive Bacula developers.
6123
		</p>
6124
	    ]]></desc>
6125
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,bacula,kern sibbald</tags>
6126
	    <files>
2413
		<file>
6127
		<file>
2414
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07_64kb.mp3</url>
6128
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/55_Bacula-BSDCan-talk-17May08.pdf</url>
2415
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
6129
		    <length>30 pages</length>
2416
		    <desc>64 kbps MP3 version</desc>
6130
		    <size>505 Kb</size>
2417
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
6131
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6132
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2418
		</file>
6133
		</file>
6134
	    </files>
6135
	</item>
6136
6137
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
6138
	    <title>Warner Losh - FreeBSD/mips</title>
6139
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/86.en.html</overview>
6140
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6141
		<h1>FreeBSD/mips</h1>
6142
		<i>Embedding FreeBSD</i>
6143
		<p>
6144
		FreeBSD now runs on the MIPS platform. FreeBSD/mips
6145
		supports MIPS-32 and MIPS-64 targets, including SMP
6146
		for multicore support.
6147
		</p><p>
6148
		FreeBSD/mips is targeted at the embedded MIPS
6149
		marketplace. FreeBSD has run on the MIPS platform
6150
		for many years. Juniper ported FreeBSD to the Mips
6151
		platform in the late 1990's. However, concern about
6152
		intellectual property issues kept Juniper from
6153
		contributing the port back to FreeBSD until recently.
6154
		The contributed port was a 64-bit mips port.
6155
		</p><p>
6156
		In the mean time, many efforts were made to bring
6157
		FreeBSD to the mips platform. The first substantial
6158
		effort to bring FreeBSD to the Mips platform was
6159
		done by Juli Mallet. This effort made it to single
6160
		user, but never further than that. This effort was
6161
		abandoned due to a change in Juli's life. The port
6162
		languished.
6163
		</p><p>
6164
		Two years ago at BSDcan, as my involvement with
6165
		FreeBSD/arm was growing, I tried to rally the troops
6166
		into doing a FreeBSD/mips port. My efforts resulted
6167
		in what has been commonly called the "mips2" effort.
6168
		The name comes from the choice of //depot/projects/mips2
6169
		to host the work in perforce. A number of people
6170
		worked on the earliest versions of the port, but
6171
		it too languished and seemed destined to suffer the
6172
		same fate as earlier efforts. Then, two individuals
6173
		stood up and started working on the port. Wojciech
6174
		A. Koszek and Oleksandr Tymoshenko pulled in code
6175
		from the prior efforts. Through their efforts of
6176
		stabilizing this code, the port to the single user
6177
		stage and ported it to three different platforms.
6178
		Others ported it to a few more. Snapshots of this
6179
		work were released from time to time.
6180
		</p><p>
6181
		Cavium Networks picked up one of these snapshots
6182
		and ported it to their multicore mips64 network
6183
		processor. Cavium has kindly donated much of their
6184
		work to the comminuty.
6185
		</p><p>
6186
		In December, I started at Cisco systems. My first
6187
		job was to merge all the divergent variants of
6188
		FreeBSD/mips and get it into shape to push into the
6189
		tree. With luck, this should be in the tree before
6190
		I give my talk.
6191
		</p><p>
6192
		In parallel to this, other advances in the embedded
6193
		support for FreeBSD have been happening as well.
6194
		I'll talk about new device drivers, new subsystems,
6195
		and new build tools that help to support the embedded
6196
		developer.
6197
		</p>
6198
	    ]]></desc>
6199
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,freebsd,mips,embedded,warner losh</tags>
6200
	    <files>
2419
		<file>
6201
		<file>
2420
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_07.ogg</url>
6202
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/63_freebsd-mips-bsdcan-2008.pdf</url>
2421
		    <length>23 minutes</length>
6203
		    <length>19 pages</length>
2422
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
6204
		    <size>1.3 Mb</size>
2423
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
6205
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6206
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2424
		</file>
6207
		</file>
2425
	    </files>
6208
	    </files>
2426
	</item>
6209
	</item>
2427
6210
2428
	<item source="f4all" added="20060605">
6211
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
2429
	    <title>Episode 06 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
6212
	    <title>Kris Moore - Building self-contained PBIs from Ports (Automagically)</title>
6213
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/81.en.html</overview>
2430
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6214
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2431
		This week we talk about-
6215
		<h1>Building self-contained PBIs from Ports (Automagically)</h1>
6216
		<i>Creating a self-contained application from the ports tree</i>
6217
		<p>
6218
		PC-BSD provides a user-friendly desktop experience,
6219
		for experts and casual users alike. PC-BSD is 100%
6220
		FreeBSD under the hood, while providing desktop
6221
		essentials, such as a graphical installation system,
6222
		point-n-click package-management using the PBI
6223
		system, and easy to use system management tools;
6224
		All integrated into an easy to use K Desktop
6225
		Environment (KDE).
6226
		</p><p>
6227
		The PBI (Push Button Installer) format is the
6228
		cornerstone of the PC-BSD desktop, which allows
6229
		users to install applications in a self-contained
6230
		format, free from dependency problems, and compile
6231
		issues that stop most casual users from desktop
6232
		adoption. The PBI format also provides power and
6233
		flexibility in user interaction, and scripting
6234
		support, which allows applications to be fine-tuned
6235
		to the best possible user experience.
6236
		</p><p>
6237
		This talk would go over in some detail our new PBI
6238
		building system, which converts a FreeBSD port,
6239
		such as FireFox, into a standalone self-contained
6240
		PBI installer for PC-BSD desktops.
6241
		</p><p>
6242
		The presentation will be divided into two main sections:
6243
		<br>
6244
		The Push Button Installer (PBI) Format
2432
		<ul>
6245
		<ul>
2433
		<li>Macromedia plugin
6246
		<li>The basics of the PBI format
2434
		<li>FreeBSD-Linux differences part 2
6247
		<li>The PBI format construction
2435
		<li>John Baldwin Introduction
6248
		<li>Add & Remove scripting support within PBI
2436
		<li>Podcast anouncement - call for co-hosts!
2437
		</ul>
6249
		</ul>
2438
		]]>
6250
		Building PBIs from Ports "Auto-magically"
2439
	    </desc>
6251
		<ul>
2440
	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/06/episode-06.html</overview>
6252
		<li>The PBI build server & standalone software
2441
	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk,john baldwin,freebsd vs linux</tags>
6253
		<li>Module creation & configuration
6254
		<li>Converting messy ports into PBIs
6255
		</ul>
6256
		</p>
6257
	    ]]></desc>
6258
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,pc-bsd,ports,pbi,kris moore</tags>
2442
	    <files>
6259
	    <files>
2443
		<prefix>http://www.archive.org/download/FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06/</prefix>
2444
		<file>
2445
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06.mp3</url>
2446
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2447
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2448
		</file>
2449
		<file>
6260
		<file>
2450
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06.ogg</url>
6261
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/57_PBIPresentation</url>
2451
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
6262
		    <length>26 pages</length>
2452
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
6263
		    <size>120 Kb</size>
2453
		</file>
6264
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2454
		<file>
6265
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2455
		    <url>FreeBSD_for_all_podcast_Episode_06_64kb.mp3</url>
2456
		    <desc>64 kbps MP3 version</desc>
2457
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2458
		</file>
6266
		</file>
2459
	    </files>
6267
	    </files>
2460
	</item>
6268
	</item>
2461
6269
2462
	<!-- Source: Bay Area FreeBSD Users Group
6270
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
2463
	-->
6271
	    <title>John Pertalion - An Open Source Enterprise VPN Solution with OpenVPN and OpenBSD</title>
2464
6272
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/71.en.html</overview>
2465
	<item source="bafug" added="20060909">
2466
	    <title>Nate Lawson on ACPI</title>
2467
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6273
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2468
<b>Our Topic:</b>
6274
		<h1>An Open Source Enterprise VPN Solution with OpenVPN and OpenBSD</h1>
2469
FreeBSD's ACPI implementation: The details.
6275
		<i>Solving the problem</i>
2470
<br>
6276
		<p>
2471
<b>Our Speaker:</b>
6277
		At Appalachian State University, we utilize an open
2472
Nate Lawson, FreeBSD Committer.
6278
		source VPN to allow faculty, staff and vendors
2473
<br>
6279
		secure access to Appalachian State University's
2474
<b>Our Topic:</b>
6280
		internal network from any location that has an
2475
FreeBSD's ACPI implementation is based on code for ACPI released
6281
		Internet connection. To implement our virtual private
2476
by Intel. Nate and others wrote the glue code to make this code
6282
		network project, we needed a secure VPN that is
2477
work on FreeBSD. He explains how this was done, and why.
6283
		flexible enough to work with our existing network
2478
]]>
6284
		registration and LDAP authentication systems, has
2479
	    </desc>
6285
		simple client installation, is redundant, allows
2480
	    <tags>bafug,presentation,freebsd,acpi,nate lawson</tags>
6286
		multiple VPN server instances for special site-to-site
6287
		tunnels and unique configurations, and can run on
6288
		multiple platforms. Using OpenVPN running on OpenBSD,
6289
		we met those requirements and added a distributed
6290
		administration system that allows select users to
6291
		allow VPN access to specific computers for external
6292
		users and vendors without requiring intervention
6293
		from our network or security personnel. Our
6294
		presentation will start with a quick overview of
6295
		OpenVPN and OpenBSD and then detail the specifics
6296
		of our VPN implementation.
6297
		</p><p>
6298
		Dissatisfied with IPSec for road warrior VPN usage
6299
		we went looking for a better solution. We had hopped
6300
		that we could find a solution that would run on
6301
		multiple platforms, was flexible and worked well.
6302
		We found OpenVPN and have been pleased. Initially
6303
		we ran it on RHEL. We migrated to OpenBSD for pf
6304
		functionality and general security concerns. ...and
6305
		because we like OpenBSD.
6306
		</p><p>
6307
		Our presentation will focus on the specifics of our
6308
		VPN implementation. We will quickly cover the basics
6309
		of OpenVPN and the most used features of OpenBSD.
6310
		Moving along we will cover multiple authentication
6311
		methods, redundancy, running multiple instances,
6312
		integration with our netreg system, how pf has
6313
		extended functionality, embedding in appliances,
6314
		and client configuration. The system has proven
6315
		helpful with providing vendor access where needed
6316
		and we'll cover this aspect as well. Time permitting
6317
		we will cover current enhancement efforts and future
6318
		plans.
6319
		</p><p>
6320
		OpenVPN has been called the "Swiss army knife" of
6321
		VPN solutions. We hope our presentation leaves
6322
		participants with that feeling.
6323
		</p>
6324
	    ]]></desc>
6325
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,openbsd,openvpn,john pertalion</tags>
2481
	    <files>
6326
	    <files>
2482
		<file>
6327
		<file>
2483
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/ACPI/bafug7-nate2.mov</url>
6328
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/59_OVPN-BSDCan2008.pdf</url>
2484
		    <size>245 Mb</size>
6329
		    <length>26 pages</length>
2485
		    <tags>mov</tags>
6330
		    <size>127 Kb</size>
6331
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6332
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2486
		</file>
6333
		</file>
2487
	    </files>
6334
	    </files>
2488
	</item>
6335
	</item>
2489
6336
2490
	<item source="bafug" added="20060810">
6337
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
2491
	    <title>Network Protocol Development Tools and Techniques for FreeBSD</title>
6338
	    <title>Ivan Voras - "finstall" - the new FreeBSD installer</title>
6339
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/69.en.html</overview>
2492
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6340
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2493
<b>Our Topic:</b>
6341
		<h1>"finstall" - the new FreeBSD installer</h1>
2494
Network Protocol Development Tools and Techniques for FreeBSD
6342
		<i>A graphical installer for FreeBSD</i>
2495
<br>
6343
		<p>
2496
<b>Our Speaker:</b>
6344
		The "finstall" project, sponsored by Google as a
2497
George Neville-Neil, co-author of the "Design and Implementation of the
6345
		Summer of Code 2007 project, is an attempt to create
2498
FreeBSD Operating System" "daemon" book.
6346
		a user-friendly graphical installer for FreeBSD,
2499
<br>
6347
		with enough strong technical features to appeal to
2500
<b>Our Topic:</b>
6348
		the more professional users. A long term goal for
2501
While computers have gotten faster and more powerful the tools we use to
6349
		it is to be a replacement for sysinstall, and as
2502
develop network protocols, such as TCP, UDP, IPv4 and IPv6 have not.
6350
		such should support almost all of the features
2503
Most network protocols are developed, in C, in the kernel, and require a
6351
		present in sysinstall, as well as add support for
2504
lot of work to test. Over the past year or so I have been working with
6352
		new FreeBSD features such as GEOM, ZFS, etc. This
2505
virtual machines, a couple of pieces of open source software, and begun
6353
		talk will describe the architecture of "finstall"
2506
developing a library for use in protocol testing. This talk will cover
6354
		and focus on its lesser known features such as
2507
three topics:
6355
		remote installation.
2508
<ol>
6356
		</p><p>
2509
<li>Developing and testing kernel code with Virtual Machines
6357
		"finstall" is funded by Google SoC as a possible
2510
<li>Finding good tests for networking code
6358
		long-term replacement for sysinstall, as a "LiveCD"
2511
<li>Packet Construction Set (PCS) a new library for writing protocol
6359
		with the whole FreeBSD base system on the CD, with
2512
     tests
6360
		X11 and XFCE4 GUI. In the talk I intend to describe
2513
</ol>
6361
		what I did so far, and what are the future plans
2514
]]>
6362
		for it. This includes the installer GUI, the backend
2515
	    </desc>
6363
		(which has the potential to become a generic FreeBSD
2516
	    <tags>bafug,presentation,freebsd,packet construction set,george neville-neil</tags>
6364
		configuration backend) and the assorted tools
6365
		developed for finstall ("LiveCD" creation scripts).
6366
		More information on finstall can be found here:
6367
		http://wiki.freebsd.org/finstall.
6368
		</p>
6369
	    ]]></desc>
6370
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,freebsd,installer,ivan voras</tags>
2517
	    <files>
6371
	    <files>
2518
		<file>
6372
		<file>
2519
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/bafug6-gnn.mov</url>
6373
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/56_bsdcantalk.pdf</url>
2520
		    <size>211 Mb</size>
6374
		    <length>39 pages</length>
2521
		    <tags>mov</tags>
6375
		    <size>1.1 Mb</size>
6376
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6377
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2522
		</file>
6378
		</file>
2523
	    </files>
6379
	    </files>
2524
	</item>
6380
	</item>
2525
6381
2526
	<item source="bafug" added="20060713">
6382
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080526">
2527
	    <title>Tim Kientzler on developing libarchive and tar</title>
6383
	    <title>Poul-Henning Kamp - Measured (almost) does Air Traffic Control</title>
2528
	    <desc>
6384
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/68.en.html</overview>
2529
		   libarchive..........Tim Kientzler on developing libarchive and tar.
6385
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2530
	    </desc>
6386
		<h1>Measured (almost) does Air Traffic Control</h1>
2531
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/libarchive/</overview>
6387
		<i>Monitoring weird hardware reliably</i>
2532
	    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
6388
		<p>
6389
		The new Danish Air Traffic Control system, CASIMO,
6390
		prompted the development on a modular and general
6391
		software platform for data collection, control and
6392
		monitoring of "weird hardware" of all sorts.
6393
		</p><p>
6394
		The talk will present the "measured" daemon, and
6395
		detail some of the uses it has been put to, as an,
6396
		admittedly peripheral, component of the ATC system.
6397
		</p><p>
6398
		Many "SCADA" systems suffer from lack of usable
6399
		interfaces for external access to the data. Measured
6400
		takes the opposite point of view and makes real-time
6401
		situation available, and accepts control instructions
6402
		as ASCII text stream over TCP connections. Several
6403
		examples of how this can be used will be demonstrated.
6404
		</p><p>
6405
		Measured will run on any FreeBSD system, but has
6406
		not been ported to other UNIX variants yet, and it
6407
		is perfect for that "intelligent house" project of
6408
		yours.
6409
		</p><p>
6410
		I believe I gave a WIP presentation of this about
6411
		two years ago.
6412
		</p>
6413
	    ]]></desc>
6414
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,air traffic control,scada,poul-henning kamp</tags>
2533
	    <files>
6415
	    <files>
2534
		<prefix>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BAFUG/talks/libarchive</prefix>
2535
		<file>
6416
		<file>
2536
		    <url>bafug5-tim-1.mov</url>
6417
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/64_BSDCan2008-AirTrafficControl.pdf</url>
2537
		    <size>50 Mb</size>
6418
		    <length>46 pages</length>
2538
		    <desc>Part 1</desc>
6419
		    <size>7.7 Mb</size>
2539
		    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
6420
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2540
		</file>
6421
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2541
		<file>
2542
		    <url>bafug5-tim-2.mov</url>
2543
		    <size>125 Mb</size>
2544
		    <desc>Part 2</desc>
2545
		    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
2546
		</file>
2547
		<file>
2548
		    <url>bafug5-tim-3.mov</url>
2549
		    <size>30 Mb</size>
2550
		    <desc>Part 3</desc>
2551
		    <tags>bafug,presentation,libarchive,tim kientzler</tags>
2552
		</file>
6422
		</file>
2553
	    </files>
6423
	    </files>
2554
	</item>
6424
	</item>
2555
6425
2556
	<!-- Source: source21
6426
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2557
	-->
6427
	    <title>Chris Lattner - BSD licensed C++ compiler</title>
2558
6428
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/99.en.html</overview>
2559
	<item source="source21" added="20060605">
6429
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2560
	    <title>Fosdem 2006: BSD</title>
6430
		<h1>BSD licensed C++ compiler</h1>
2561
	    <desc>We talk with Daniel Seuffert about BSD. Several flavours of bsd were represented in a joint BSD booth: openbsd, freebsd, netbsd and miros. Daniel is representative of the FreeBSD project and among other things talks about the different operating systems that are build on top of freebsd. For instance, there are two distributions called pcbsd and desktopbsd that are targetted towards desktop users. There also is a version that specializes on security entitled trustedbsd.</desc>
6431
		<p>
2562
	    <link>http://www.source21.nl/2006/06/05/fosdem-2006-bsd/</link>
6432
		LLVM is a suite of carefully designed open source
2563
	    <tags>source21,interview,daniel seuffert</tags>
6433
		libraries that implement compiler components (like
6434
		language front-ends, code generators, aggressive
6435
		optimizers, Just-In-Time compiler support, debug
6436
		support, link-time optimization, etc.). The goal
6437
		of the LLVM project is to build these components
6438
		in a way that allows them to be combined together
6439
		to create familiar tools (like a C compiler),
6440
		interesting new tools (like an OpenGL JIT compiler),
6441
		and many other things we haven't thought of yet.
6442
		Because LLVM is under continuous development, clients
6443
		of these components naturally benefit from improvements
6444
		in the libraries.
6445
		</p><p>
6446
		This talk gives an overview of LLVM's design and
6447
		approach to compiler construction, and gives several
6448
		example applications. It describes applications of
6449
		LLVM technology to llvm-gcc (a C/C++/Objective C
6450
		compiler based on the GNU GCC front-end), the OpenGL
6451
		stack in Mac OS/X Leopard, and Clang. Among other
6452
		things, the Clang+LLVM Compiler provides a fully
6453
		BSD-Licensed C and Objective-C compiler (with C++
6454
		in development) which compiles code several times
6455
		faster than GCC, produces code that is faster than
6456
		GCC in many cases, produces better warnings and
6457
		error messages, and supports many other applications
6458
		(e.g. static analysis and refactoring).
6459
		</p>
6460
	    ]]></desc>
6461
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,bsdl,llvm,chris lattner</tags>
2564
	    <files>
6462
	    <files>
2565
		<file>
6463
		<file>
2566
		    <url>http://www.source21.nl/media/20060605/bsd_-_daniel_seuffert.mp4</url>
6464
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/53_BSDCan2008ChrisLattnerBSDCompiler.pdf</url>
2567
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
6465
		    <length>33 pages</length>
6466
		    <size>5.8 Mb</size>
6467
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6468
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2568
		</file>
6469
		</file>
2569
	    </files>
6470
	    </files>
2570
	</item>
6471
	</item>
2571
6472
2572
	<!-- Source: ccc22
6473
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2573
	-->
6474
	    <title>Robert Watson - BSDCan 2008 - Closing</title>
2574
6475
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/97.en.html</overview>
2575
	<item source="ccc22" added="20060823">
6476
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2576
	    <title>COMPLETE Hard Disk Encryption with FreeBSD</title>
6477
		<h1>Closing</h1>
2577
	    <desc><![CDATA[COMPLETE Hard Disk Encryption with FreeBSD, by    	 Marc Schiesser
6478
		<i>Beer, prizes, secrets, Works In Progress</i>
2578
<br><br>
6479
		<p>
2579
Learn how to effectively protect not only your data but also your applications
6480
		The traditional closing...
2580
<br><br>
6481
		<br>
2581
Most technologies and techniques intended for securing digital data focus on protection while the machine is turned on  mostly by defending against remote attacks. An attacker with physical access to the machine, however, can easily circumvent these defenses by reading out the contents of the storage medium on a different, fully accessible system or even compromise program code on it in order to leak encrypted information. Especially for mobile users, that threat is real. And for those carrying around sensitive data, the risk is most likely high. This talk will introduce a method of mitigating that particular risk by protecting not only the data through encryption, but also the applications and the operating system from being compromised while the machine is turned off.
6482
		with some new and interesting twists. Sleep in if
2582
]]>
6483
		you must, but don't miss this session.
2583
</desc>
6484
		</p>
2584
	    <overview>http://events.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/events/1139.en.html</overview>
6485
	    ]]></desc>
2585
	    <tags>ccc,presentation,freebsd,harddisk encryption,marc schiesser</tags>
6486
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,robert watson</tags>
2586
	    <files>
6487
	    <files>
2587
		<file>
6488
		<file>
2588
		    <url>http://events.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/attachments/687-slides_Complete_Hard_Disk_Encryption.pdf</url>
6489
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/47_BSDCann2008Closing.pdf</url>
2589
		    <size>679Kb</size>
6490
		    <length>55 pages</length>
2590
		    <desc>Slides</desc>
6491
		    <size>428 Kb</size>
2591
		    <tags>slides</tags>
6492
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2592
		</file>
6493
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2593
		<file>
2594
		    <url><![CDATA[http://vp.video.google.com/videodownload?version=0&secureurl=uAAAANDveMbSROZ54T6ovHpX7U46rpfxARh9qN1NEemo6WM7qeDBk-8GxxtGIXTqDRuaHnUUJVcUs0bf539CXM4fqBp6xeb9INr7CRp9JPcKZeT9UsSqDsvdYZhiN7xnPzju7rN379RkfS47rjI8TnCJ1iQdrEqhd8Okw_KJcO7O3Iq00GUYYZaedmq5jrmy1ezFXGAG6KURgb8RV19cCaui1U0zVEKd2ApjzlxRHSi89QBih_VSyFE64p3haNyy76qCVQ&sigh=GK-OoKkmqQWNalgoUzB4HmzA3EI&begin=0&len=3967520&docid=-2979502732836620391]]></url>
2595
		    <length>1:06:07</length>
2596
		    <desc>Google Video</desc>
2597
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
2598
		</file>
2599
		<file>
2600
		    <url>http://events.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/attachments/905-22C3-1139-en-complete_harddisk_encryption_with_freebsd.mp4.torrent</url>
2601
		    <size>37Kb</size>
2602
		    <desc>Bittorrent link</desc>
2603
		    <tags>mp4</tags>
2604
		</file>
6494
		</file>
2605
	    </files>
6495
	    </files>
2606
	</item>
6496
	</item>
2607
6497
2608
	<!-- Source: aauug
6498
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2609
	-->
6499
	    <title>Leslie Hawthorn - Google SoC</title>
2610
6500
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/95.en.html</overview>
2611
	<item source="aauug" added="20070115">
6501
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2612
	    <title>FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen</title>
6502
		<h1>Google SoC</h1>
2613
	    <desc>
6503
		<i>Summer of Code</i>
2614
		"FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen" at the AAUUG, AAUUG, 22 August 2006 by Simon L. Nielsen (FreeBSD Deputy Security Officer)
6504
		<p>
2615
	    </desc>
6505
		In this talk, I will briefly discuss some general
2616
	    <overview>http://www.aauug.dk/foredrag.html</overview>
6506
		ways Google's Open Source Team contributes to the
2617
	    <tags>aauug,presentation,danish,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
6507
		wider community. The rest of the talk will explore
6508
		some highlights of the Google Summer of Code program,
6509
		our initiative to get university students involved
6510
		in Open Source development.
6511
		</p><p>
6512
		I will cover the program's inception, lessons learned
6513
		over time and tips for success in the program for
6514
		both mentors and students. In particular, the talk
6515
		will detail some experiences of the *BSD mentoring
6516
		organizations involved in the program as a case
6517
		study in successfully managing the program from the
6518
		Open Source project's perspective. Any Google Summer
6519
		of Code participants in the audience are welcome
6520
		and encouraged to chime in with their own insights.
6521
		</p>
6522
	    ]]></desc>
6523
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,google,summer of code,leslie hawthorn</tags>
2618
	    <files>
6524
	    <files>
2619
		<file>
6525
		<file>
2620
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~simon/presentations/freebsd-so-function-aauug-2006-08-22.pdf</url>
6526
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/52_LeslieHawthorn_bsdcan2008.pdf</url>
2621
		    <size>211 Kb</size>
6527
		    <length>44 pages</length>
2622
		    <desc>PDF (danish)</desc>
6528
		    <size>2.2 Mb</size>
6529
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2623
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6530
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2624
		</file>
6531
		</file>
2625
	    </files>
6532
	    </files>
2626
	</item>
6533
	</item>
2627
6534
2628
	<!-- Source: bsd-dk
6535
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2629
	-->
6536
	    <title>Pawel Jakub Dawidek - A closer look at the ZFS file system</title>
2630
6537
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/93.en.html</overview>
2631
	<item source="bsd-dk" added="20070115">
6538
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2632
	    <title>FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen</title>
6539
		<h1>A closer look at the ZFS file system</h1>
2633
	    <desc>
6540
		<i>simple administration, transactional semantics, end-to-end data integrity</i>
2634
		"FreeBSD Security Officer funktionen" at the BSD-DK, 26 August 2006 by Simon L. Nielsen (FreeBSD Deputy Security Officer)
6541
		<p>
2635
	    </desc>
6542
		SUN's ZFS file system became part of FreeBSD on 6th
2636
	    <tags>aauug,presentation,danish,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
6543
		April 2007. ZFS is a new kind of file system that
6544
		provides simple administration, transactional
6545
		semantics, end-to-end data integrity, and immense
6546
		scalability. ZFS is not an incremental improvement
6547
		to existing technology; it is a fundamentally new
6548
		approach to data management. We've blown away 20
6549
		years of obsolete assumptions, eliminated complexity
6550
		at the source, and created a storage system that's
6551
		actually a pleasure to use.
6552
		</p><p>
6553
		ZFS presents a pooled storage model that completely
6554
		eliminates the concept of volumes and the associated
6555
		problems of partitions, provisioning, wasted bandwidth
6556
		and stranded storage. Thousands of file systems can
6557
		draw from a common storage pool, each one consuming
6558
		only as much space as it actually needs. The combined
6559
		I/O bandwidth of all devices in the pool is available
6560
		to all filesystems at all times.
6561
		</p><p>
6562
		All operations are copy-on-write transactions, so
6563
		the on-disk state is always valid. There is no need
6564
		to fsck(1M) a ZFS file system, ever. Every block
6565
		is checksummed to prevent silent data corruption,
6566
		and the data is self-healing in replicated (mirrored
6567
		or RAID) configurations. If one copy is damaged,
6568
		ZFS detects it and uses another copy to repair it.
6569
		</p>
6570
	    ]]></desc>
6571
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,zfs,freebsd,pawel jakub dawidek</tags>
2637
	    <files>
6572
	    <files>
2638
		<file>
6573
		<file>
2639
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~simon/presentations/freebsd-so-function-bsd-dk-2006-08.pdf</url>
6574
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/58_BSDCan2008-ZFSInternals.pdf</url>
2640
		    <size>210 Kb</size>
6575
		    <length>33 pages</length>
2641
		    <desc>PDF (danish)</desc>
6576
		    <size>150 Kb</size>
6577
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2642
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6578
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2643
		</file>
6579
		</file>
2644
	    </files>
6580
	    </files>
2645
	</item>
6581
	</item>
2646
	
2647
6582
2648
	<!-- Source: nuug
6583
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2649
	-->
6584
	    <title>Rafal Jaworowski - Interfacing embedded FreeBSD with U-Boot</title>
2650
6585
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/74.en.html</overview>
2651
	<item source="nuug" added="20061003">
2652
	    <title>Releaseparty, the Varnish HTTP accelerator</title>
2653
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6586
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6587
		<h1>Interfacing embedded FreeBSD with U-Boot</h1>
6588
		<i>Working with the de facto standard for an initial level boot loader</i>
2654
		<p>
6589
		<p>
2655
		VG sponsored the creation of a web-accellerator
6590
		In the embedded world U-Boot is a de facto standard
2656
		called "Varnish" because Squid was too slow for
6591
		for an initial level boot loader (firmware). It
2657
		them. Varnish is being developed by Poul-Henning
6592
		runs on a great number of platforms and architectures,
2658
		Kamp and the Norwegian Linux consultancy Linpro.
6593
		and is open source.
2659
		This is the releaseparty for version 1.0.
6594
		</p><p>
2660
		</p>
6595
		This talk covers the development work on integrating
2661
		<p>
6596
		FreeBSD with U-Boot-based systems. Starting with
2662
		The first half of the talk will introduce Varnish
6597
		an overview of differences between booting an
2663
		and present some of the novel features it brings
6598
		all-purpose desktop computer vs. embedded system,
2664
		to the business of web-serving.
6599
		FreeBSD booting concepts are explained along with
2665
		</p>
6600
		requirements for the underlying firmware.
2666
		<p>
6601
		</p><p>
2667
		The second half of the talk, using Varnish as the
6602
		Historical attempts to interface FreeBSD with this
2668
		example, will show ways to get the most performance
6603
		firmware are mentioned and explanation given on why
2669
		out of modern hardware and operating systems.
6604
		they failed or proved incomplete. Finally, the
6605
		recently developed approach to integrate FreeBSD
6606
		and U-Boot is presented, with implementation details
6607
		and particular attention on how it's been made
6608
		architecture and platform independent, and how
6609
		loader(8) has been bound to it.
2670
		</p>
6610
		</p>
2671
		(The English text starts at about 5 minutes in the stream)
6611
	    ]]></desc>
2672
		]]>
6612
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,embedded,freebsd,u-boot,rafal jaworowski</tags>
2673
	    </desc>
2674
	    <overview>http://www.nuug.no/aktiviteter/20060919-varnish/</overview>
2675
	    <tags>nuug,presentation,varnish,poul-henning kamp</tags>
2676
	    <files>
6613
	    <files>
2677
		<prefix>http://www.nuug.no/pub/video/published/</prefix>
2678
		<file>
6614
		<file>
2679
		    <url>20060919-varnish.mpeg</url>
6615
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/49_2008_uboot_freebsd.pdf</url>
2680
		    <size>230 Mb</size>
6616
		    <length>26 pages</length>
2681
		    <desc>Video version</desc>
6617
		    <size>300 Kb</size>
2682
		    <tags>mpeg</tags>
6618
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2683
		</file>
6619
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2684
		<file>
2685
		    <url>20060919-varnish.mp3</url>
2686
		    <length>47.8 Mb</length>
2687
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2688
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2689
		</file>
6620
		</file>
2690
	    </files>
6621
	    </files>
2691
	</item>
6622
	</item>
2692
6623
2693
	<item source="openbsd" added="20061010">
6624
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2694
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.0 Release Songs - OpenVOX</title>
6625
	    <title>John Baldwin - Introduction to Debugging the FreeBSD Kernel</title>
6626
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/70.en.html</overview>
2695
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6627
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6628
		<h1>Introduction to Debugging the FreeBSD Kernel</h1>
2696
		<p>
6629
		<p>
2697
		This is an extra track by the artist Ty Semaka (who
6630
		Just like every other piece of software, the FreeBSD
2698
		really has "had Puffy on his mind") which we included
6631
		kernel has bugs. Debugging a kernel is a bit different
2699
		on the audio CD.
6632
		from debugging a userland program as there is nothing
2700
		</p>
6633
		underneath the kernel to provide debugging facilities
2701
		<p>
6634
		such as ptrace() or procfs. This paper will give a
2702
		This song details the process that Ty has to go
6635
		brief overview of some of the tools available for
2703
		through to make the art and music for each OpenBSD
6636
		investigating bugs in the FreeBSD kernel. It will
2704
		release. Ty and Theo really do go to a (very specific)
6637
		cover the in-kernel debugger DDB and the external
2705
		bar and discuss what is going on in the project,
6638
		debugger kgdb which is used to perform post-mortem
2706
		and then try to find a theme that will work...
6639
		analysis on kernel crash dumps.
2707
		</p>
6640
		</p><p>
2708
		<p>
6641
		<h2>Introduction to Debugging the FreeBSD Kernel</h2>
2709
		For RSS readers: Please note that the download URL
6642
		<ul>
2710
		is an FTP site.
6643
		<li>Basic crash messages, what a crash looks like
6644
		    <ul>
6645
		    <li>typical panic() invocation
6646
		    <li>page fault example
6647
		    </ul>
6648
		<li>"live" debugging with DDB
6649
		    <ul>
6650
		    <li>stack traces
6651
		    <li>ps
6652
		    <li>deadlock examples
6653
		    <li>show lockchain
6654
		    <li>show sleepchain
6655
		    <li>Adding new DDB commands
6656
		    </ul>
6657
		<li>KGDB
6658
		    <ul>
6659
		    <li>inspecting processes and threads
6660
		    <li>working with kernel modules
6661
		    <li>using scripts to extend
6662
		    </ul>
6663
		<li>examining crashdumps using utilities
6664
		    <ul>
6665
		    <li>ps, netstat, etc.
6666
		    </ul>
6667
		<li>debugging strategies
6668
		    <ul>
6669
		    <li>kernel crashes
6670
		    <li>system hangs
6671
		    </ul>
6672
		</ul>
2711
		</p>
6673
		</p>
2712
		]]>
6674
	    ]]></desc>
2713
	    </desc>
6675
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,paper,debugging,freebsd,john baldwin</tags>
2714
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#audio_extra</overview>
2715
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
2716
	    <files>
6676
	    <files>
2717
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
2718
		<file>
6677
		<file>
2719
		    <url>songty.mp3</url>
6678
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/46_slides.pdf</url>
2720
		    <size>3.9 Mb</size>
6679
		    <length>26 pages</length>
2721
		    <length>4 minutes</length>
6680
		    <size>113 Kb</size>
2722
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
6681
		    <desc>slides, PDF file</desc>
2723
		    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
6682
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2724
		</file>
6683
		</file>
2725
		<file>
6684
		<file>
2726
		    <url>songty.ogg</url>
6685
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/45_article.pdf</url>
2727
		    <size>6.0 Mb</size>
6686
		    <length>15 pages</length>
2728
		    <length>4 minutes</length>
6687
		    <size>121 Kb</size>
2729
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
6688
		    <desc>paper, PDF file</desc>
2730
		    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
6689
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2731
		</file>
6690
		</file>
2732
	    </files>
6691
	    </files>
2733
	</item>
6692
	</item>
2734
6693
2735
	<item source="openbsd" added="20070502">
6694
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2736
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.1 Release Song - Puffy Baba and the 40 Vendors</title>
6695
	    <title>John Birrell - DTrace for FreeBSD</title>
6696
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/66.en.html</overview>
2737
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6697
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6698
		<h1>DTrace for FreeBSD</h1>
6699
		<i>What on earth is that system doing?!</i>
2738
		<p>
6700
		<p>
2739
		As developers of a free operating system, one of
6701
		DTrace is a comprehensive dynamic tracing facility
2740
		our prime responsibilities is device support. No
6702
		originally developed for Solaris that can be used
2741
		matter how nice an operating system is, it remains
6703
		by administrators and developers on live production
2742
		useless and unusable without solid support for a
6704
		systems to examine the behavior of both user programs
2743
		wide percentage of the hardware that is available
6705
		and of the operating system itself. DTrace enables
2744
		on the market. It is therefore rather unsurprising
6706
		users to explore their system to understand how it
2745
		that more than half of our efforts focus on various
6707
		works, track down performance problems across many
2746
		aspects relating to device support.
6708
		layers of software, or locate the cause of aberrant
2747
		</p>
6709
		behavior. DTrace lets users create their own custom
2748
		<p>
6710
		programs to dynamically instrument the system and
2749
		Most parts of the operating system (from low kernel,
6711
		provide immediate, concise answers to arbitrary
2750
		through to libraries, all the way up to X, and then
6712
		questions you can formulate using the DTrace D
2751
		even to applications) use fairly obvious interface
6713
		programming language.
2752
		layers, where the "communication protocols" or
6714
		</p><p>
2753
		"argument passing" mechanisms (ie. APIs) can be
6715
		This talk discusses the port of the DTrace facility
2754
		understood by any developer who takes the time to
6716
		to FreeBSD and demonstrates examples on a live
2755
		read the free code. Device drivers pose an additional
6717
		FreeBSD system.
2756
		and significant challenge though: because many
6718
		<ul>
2757
		vendors refuse to document the exact behavior of
6719
		<li>Introduction to the D language - probes, predicates and actions.
2758
		their devices.  The devices are black boxes. And
6720
		<li>dtrace(8) and libdtrace - the userland side of the DTrace story.
2759
		often they are surprisingly weird, or even buggy.
6721
		<li>The DTrace kernel module, it's ioctl interface to userland and the provider infrastructure in the kernel.
2760
		</p>
6722
		<li>DTrace kernel hooks and the problem of code licensed under Sun's CDDL.
2761
		<p>
6723
		<li>What does a DTrace probe actually do?
2762
		When vendor documentation does not exist, the
6724
		<li>DTrace safety and how it is implemented.
2763
		development process can become extremely hairy.
6725
		<li>Build system changes to add CTF (Compact C Type Format) data to objects, shared libraries and executables.
2764
		Groups of developers have found themselves focused
6726
		<li>The DTrace test suite.
2765
		for months at a time, figuring out the most simple
6727
		<li>A brief list of things to do to port the DTrace facility to other BSD-derived operating systems.
2766
		steps, simply because the hardware is a complete
6728
		</ul>
2767
		mystery. Access to documentation can ease these
2768
		difficulties rapidly. However, getting access to
2769
		the chip documentation from vendors is ... almost
2770
		always a negotiation. If we had open access to
2771
		documentation, anyone would be able to see how
2772
		simple all these devices actually are, and device
2773
		driver development would flourish (and not just in
2774
		OpenBSD, either).
2775
		</p>
2776
		<p>
2777
		When we proceed into negotiations with vendors,
2778
		asking for documentation, our position is often
2779
		weak. One would assume that the modern market is
2780
		fair, and that selling chips would be the primary
2781
		focus of these vendors. But unfortunately a number
2782
		of behemoth software vendors have spent the last
2783
		10 or 20 years building <a
2784
		href="http://www.openbsd.org/papers/brhard2007/mgp00024.html">political
2785
		hurdles against the smaller players</a>.
2786
		</p>
2787
		<p>
2788
		A particularly nasty player in this regard has been
2789
		the Linux vendors and some Linux developers, who
2790
		have played along with an American corporate model
2791
		of requiring NDAs for chip documentation. This has
2792
		effectively put Linux into the club with Microsoft,
2793
		but has left all the other operating system communities
2794
		-- and their developers -- with much less available
2795
		clout for requesting documentation. In a more fair
2796
		world, the Linux vendors would work with us, and
2797
		the device driver support in all free operating
2798
		systems would be fantastic by now.
2799
		</p>
2800
		<p>
2801
		We only ask that <a
2802
		href="http://www.openbsd.org/papers/brhard2007/mgp00027.html">users
2803
		help</a> us in changing the political landscape.
2804
		</p>
6729
		</p>
2805
		]]>
6730
	    ]]></desc>
2806
	    </desc>
6731
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,dtrace,freebsd,john birrell</tags>
2807
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#41</overview>
2808
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
2809
	    <files>
6732
	    <files>
2810
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
2811
		<file>
2812
		    <url>song41.mp3</url>
2813
		    <size>4.1 Mb</size>
2814
		    <length>4 minutes 19 seconds</length>
2815
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
2816
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
2817
		</file>
2818
		<file>
6733
		<file>
2819
		    <url>song41.ogg</url>
6734
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/60_dtrace_bsdcan.pdf</url>
2820
		    <size>8.3 Mb</size>
6735
		    <length>49 pages</length>
2821
		    <length>4 minutes 19 seconds</length>
6736
		    <size>148 Kb</size>
2822
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
6737
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2823
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
6738
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2824
		</file>
6739
		</file>
2825
	    </files>
6740
	    </files>
2826
	</item>
6741
	</item>
2827
6742
2828
	<item source="openbsd" added="20061010">
6743
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
2829
	    <title>OpenBSD 4.0 Release Song - Humppa negala</title>
6744
	    <title>Matthieu Herrb - X.org</title>
6745
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/94.en.html</overview>
2830
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6746
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6747
		<h1>X.org</h1>
6748
		<i>upcoming plans</i>
2831
		<p>
6749
		<p>
2832
		The last 10 years, every 6 month period has (without
6750
		The X.Org project provides an open source implementation
2833
		fail) resulted in an official OpenBSD release making
6751
		of the X Window System. The development work is
2834
		it to the FTP servers. But CDs are also manufactured,
6752
		being done in conjunction with the freedesktop.org
2835
		which the project sells to continue our development
6753
		community. The X.Org Foundation is the educational
2836
		goals.
6754
		non-profit corporation whose Board serves this
2837
		</p>
6755
		effort, and whose Members lead this work.
2838
		<p>
6756
		</p><p>
2839
		While tests of the release binaries are done by
6757
		The X window system has been changing a lot in the
2840
		developers around the world, Theo and some developers
6758
		recent years, and still changing. This talk will
2841
		from Calgary or Edmonton (such as Peter Valchev or
6759
		present this evolution, summarizing what has already
2842
		Bob Beck) test that the discs are full of (only)
6760
		been done and showing the current roadmap for future
2843
		correct code. Ty Semaka works for approximately two
6761
		evolutions, with some focus on how *BSD kernels can
2844
		months to design and draw artwork that will fit the
6762
		be affected by the developments done with Linux as
2845
		designated theme, and coordinates with his music
6763
		the primary target.
2846
		buddies to write and record a song that also matches
2847
		the theme.
2848
		</p>
2849
		<p>
2850
		Then the discs and all the artwork gets delivered
2851
		to the plant, so that they can be pressed in time
2852
		for an official release date.
2853
		</p>
6764
		</p>
6765
	    ]]></desc>
6766
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,x.org,matthieu herrb</tags>
6767
	    <files>
6768
		<file>
6769
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/51_bsdcan08-xorg.pdf</url>
6770
		    <length>30 pages</length>
6771
		    <size>1.6 Mb</size>
6772
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6773
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6774
		</file>
6775
	    </files>
6776
	</item>
6777
6778
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
6779
	    <title>Adrian Chad - What Not To Do When Writing Network Applications</title>
6780
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/72.en.html</overview>
6781
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6782
		<h1>What Not To Do When Writing Network Applications</h1>
6783
		<i>The lessons learnt working with not-so-high-performance network applications</i>
2854
		<p>
6784
		<p>
2855
		This release, instead of bemoaning vendors or
6785
		This talk will look at issues which face the modern
2856
		organizations that try to make our task of writing
6786
		network application developer, from the point of
2857
		free software more difficult, we instead celebrate
6787
		view of poorly-designed examples. This will cover
2858
		the 10 years that we have been given (so far) to
6788
		internal code structure and dataflow, interaction
2859
		write free software, express our themes in art, and
6789
		with the TCP stack, IO scheduling in high and low
2860
		the 5 years that we have made music with a group
6790
		latency environments and high-availability
2861
		of talented musicians.
6791
		considerations. In essence, this presentation should
6792
		be seen as a checklist of what not to do when writing
6793
		network applications.
6794
		</p><p>
6795
		Plenty of examples of well designed network
6796
		applications exist in the open and closed source
6797
		world today. Unfortunately there are just as many
6798
		examples of fast network applications as there are
6799
		"fast but workload specific"; sometimes failing
6800
		miserably in handling the general case. This may
6801
		be due to explicit design (eg Varnish) but many are
6802
		simply due to the designer not fully appreciating
6803
		the wide variance in "networks" - and their network
6804
		application degrades ungracefully when under duress.
6805
		My aim in this presentation is to touch on a wide
6806
		number of issues which face network application
6807
		programmers - most of which seem not "application
6808
		related" to the newcomer - such as including
6809
		pipelining into network communication, managing a
6810
		balance between accepting new requests and servicing
6811
		existing requests, or providing back-pressure to a
6812
		L4 loadbalancer in case of traffic bursts. Various
6813
		schemes for working with these issues will be
6814
		presented, and hopefully participants will walk
6815
		away with more of an understanding about how the
6816
		network, application and operating systems interact.
2862
		</p>
6817
		</p>
6818
	    ]]></desc>
6819
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,network applications,adrian chad</tags>
6820
	    <files>
6821
		<file>
6822
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/61_BSDCan2008-Network-Applications.pdf</url>
6823
		    <length>73 pages</length>
6824
		    <size>190 Kb</size>
6825
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6826
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6827
		</file>
6828
	    </files>
6829
	</item>
6830
6831
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
6832
	    <title>Brooks Davis - Using FreeBSD to Promote Open Source Development Methods</title>
6833
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/64.en.html</overview>
6834
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6835
		<h1>Using FreeBSD to Promote Open Source Development Methods</h1>
2863
		<p>
6836
		<p>
2864
		OpenBSD developers have been torturing each other
6837
		In this talk we present Aerosource, an initiative
2865
		for years now with Humppa-style music, so this
6838
		to bring Open Source Software development methods
2866
		release our users get a taste of this too. Sometimes
6839
		to internal software developers at The Aerospace
2867
		at hackathons you will hear the same songs being
6840
		Corporation.
2868
		played on multiple laptops, out of sync. It is under
6841
		</p><p>
2869
		such duress that much of our code gets written.
6842
		Within Aerosource, FreeBSD is used in several key
6843
		roles. First, we run most of our tools on top of
6844
		FreeBSD. Second, the ports collection (both official
6845
		ports and custom internal ones) eases our administrative
6846
		burden. Third, the FreeBSD project serves as an
6847
		example and role model for the results that can be
6848
		achieved by an Open Source Software projects. We
6849
		discuss the development infrastructure we have built
6850
		for Aerosource based largely on BSD licensed software
6851
		including FreeBSD, PostgreSQL, Apache, and Trac.
6852
		We will also discuss our custom management tools
6853
		including our system for managing our custom internal
6854
		ports. Finally, we will cover our development
6855
		successes and how we use projects like FreeBSD as
6856
		exemplars of OSS development.
2870
		</p>
6857
		</p>
6858
	    ]]></desc>
6859
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,abstract,software development,brooks davis</tags>
6860
	    <files>
6861
		<file>
6862
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/43_extended-abstract.pdf</url>
6863
		    <length>2 pages</length>
6864
		    <size>72 Kb</size>
6865
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6866
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6867
		</file>
6868
		<file>
6869
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/62_freebsd-oss-methods.pdf</url>
6870
		    <length>33 pages</length>
6871
		    <size>1 Mb</size>
6872
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6873
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6874
		</file>
6875
	    </files>
6876
	</item>
6877
6878
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
6879
	    <title>Randall Stewart - SCTP what it is and how to use it</title>
6880
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/91.en.html</overview>
6881
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6882
		<h1>SCTP - SCTP what it is and how to use it</h1>
2871
		<p>
6883
		<p>
2872
		We feel like Pufferix and Bobilix delivering The
6884
		This talk will introduce the attendee into the
2873
		Three Discs of Freedom to those who want them
6885
		interesting world of SCTP.
2874
		whenever the need arises, then returning to celebrate
6886
		</p><p>
2875
		the (unlocked) source tree with all the other
6887
		We will first discuss the new and different features
2876
		developers.
6888
		that SCTP (a new transport in FreeBSD 7.0) provide
6889
		to the user. Then we will shift gears and discuss
6890
		the extended socket API that is available to SCTP
6891
		users and will cover such items as:
6892
		<ul>
6893
		<li>The two socket programming models
6894
		<li>Extended system calls that support the SCTP feature set.
6895
		<li>What model may fit you best
6896
		</ul>
2877
		</p>
6897
		</p>
6898
	    ]]></desc>
6899
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,abstract,freebsd,sctp,randall stewart</tags>
6900
	    <files>
6901
		<file>
6902
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/44_bsdcan_sctp.pdf</url>
6903
		    <length>10 pages</length>
6904
		    <size>130 Kb</size>
6905
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
6906
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
6907
		</file>
6908
	    </files>
6909
	</item>
6910
6911
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
6912
	    <title>Rafal Jaworowski - Porting FreeBSD/ARM to Marvell Orion System-On-Chip</title>
6913
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/73.en.html</overview>
6914
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6915
		<h1>Porting FreeBSD/ARM to Marvell Orion System-On-Chip</h1>
2878
		<p>
6916
		<p>
2879
		For RSS readers: Please note that the download URL
6917
		This talk covers the development work on porting
2880
		is an FTP site.
6918
		the FreeBSD/ARM to Marvell Orion family of highly
6919
		integrated chips.
6920
		</p><p>
6921
		ARM architecture is widely adopted in the embedded
6922
		devices, and since the architecture can be licensed,
6923
		many implementation variations exist: Orion is a
6924
		derivative compliant with the ARMv5TE definition,
6925
		it provides a rich set of on-chip peripherals.
6926
		</p><p>
6927
		Present state of the FreeBSD support for ARM is
6928
		explained, areas for improvement highlighted and
6929
		its overall shape and condition presented.
6930
		</p><p>
6931
		The main discussion covers scope of the Orion port
6932
		(what integrated peripherals required new development,
6933
		what was adapted from existing code base); design
6934
		decisions are explained for the most critical items,
6935
		and implementation details revealed.
6936
		</p><p>
6937
		Summary notes are given on general porting methodology,
6938
		debugging techniques and difficulties encountered
6939
		during such undertaking.
2881
		</p>
6940
		</p>
2882
		]]>
6941
	    ]]></desc>
2883
	    </desc>
6942
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,freebsd,arm,marvell orion,rafal jaworowski</tags>
2884
	    <overview>http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#40</overview>
2885
	    <tags>openbsd,artwork</tags>
2886
	    <files>
6943
	    <files>
2887
		<prefix>ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/</prefix>
2888
		<file>
6944
		<file>
2889
		    <url>song40.mp3</url>
6945
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/50_2008_marvell_freebsd.pdf</url>
2890
		    <size>2.3 Mb</size>
6946
		    <length>25 pages</length>
2891
		    <length>2 minutes 40 seconds</length>
6947
		    <size>193 Kb</size>
2892
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
6948
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2893
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
6949
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2894
		</file>
6950
		</file>
6951
	    </files>
6952
	</item>
6953
6954
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20080521">
6955
	    <title>Dan Langille - BSDCan 2008 - Opening session</title>
6956
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/events/59.en.html</overview>
6957
	    <desc><![CDATA[
6958
		<h1>Opening session</h1>
6959
		Welcome to BSDCan 2008
6960
		<br>
6961
		Traditional greetings
6962
	    ]]></desc>
6963
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2008,slides,dan langille</tags>
6964
	    <files>
2895
		<file>
6965
		<file>
2896
		    <url>song40.ogg</url>
6966
		    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2008/schedule/attachments/48_BSDCan2008Opening.pdf</url>
2897
		    <size>3.6 Mb</size>
6967
		    <length>17 pages</length>
2898
		    <length>2 minutes 40 seconds</length>
6968
		    <size>500 Kb</size>
2899
		    <desc>OGG version</desc>
6969
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
2900
		    <tags>ogg</tags>
6970
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
2901
		</file>
6971
		</file>
2902
	    </files>
6972
	    </files>
2903
	</item>
6973
	</item>
2904
6974
2905
6975
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070824">
2906
	<!-- Source: EuroBSDCon
6976
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 - Videos</title>
2907
	-->
6977
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
2908
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20061114">
6978
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2909
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures</title>
6979
		The 2007 BSDCan conference<br>
2910
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures by Christian Laursen</desc>
6980
		Kirk McKusick - Code Reading of Locally-Connected Sockets<br>
2911
	    <overview>http://photos.borderworlds.dk/eurobsdcon-2006/</overview>
6981
	    ]]></desc>
2912
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,photos,christian laursen</tags>
6982
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks,kirk mckusick</tags>
2913
	</item>
6983
	    <files>
2914
	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20061114">
6984
		<file>
2915
	    <title>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures</title>
6985
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/Kirk_UnixDomain.mov</url>
2916
	    <desc>EuroBSDCon 2006 pictures by Erwin Lansing (erwin@)</desc>
6986
		    <length>35 minutes</length>
2917
	    <overview>http://foto.droso.org/2006/20061108-13/</overview>
6987
		    <size>77 Mb</size>
2918
	    <tags>eurobsdcon,photos,erwin lansing</tags>
6988
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
6989
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
6990
		</file>
6991
	    </files>
2919
	</item>
6992
	</item>
2920
6993
2921
	<!-- Source: openfest
6994
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070814">
2922
	-->
6995
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 - Videos</title>
2923
	<item source="openfest" added="20070115">
6996
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
2924
	    <title>FreeBSD ports Erwin Lansing</title>
6997
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2925
	    <desc>Case study : managing a worldwide open source project: FreeBSD port manager</desc>
6998
		The 2007 BSDCan conference<br>
2926
	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program/</overview>
6999
		Erwin Lansing - The state of the FreeBSD Ports Tree<br>
2927
	    <tags>openfest,presentation,freebsd,port manager,erwin lansing</tags>
7000
	    ]]></desc>
7001
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks,erwin lansing,ports</tags>
2928
	    <files>
7002
	    <files>
2929
		<file>
7003
		<file>
2930
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~erwin/presentations/FreeBSD-portmgr-20061105-OpenFest.pdf</url>
7004
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/Lansing-Portmanager.mov</url>
2931
		    <size>128 Kb</size>
7005
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
2932
		    <desc>PDF</desc>
7006
		    <size>39 Mb</size>
2933
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
7007
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
7008
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
2934
		</file>
7009
		</file>
2935
	    </files>
7010
	    </files>
2936
	</item>
7011
	</item>
2937
7012
2938
	<!-- Source: The Linux Link Tech Show
7013
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070813">
2939
	-->
7014
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Videos</title>
2940
	<item source="tllts" added="20070217">
7015
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
2941
	    <title>The Linux Link Tech Show Episode 179</title>
2942
	    <desc>
7016
	    <desc>
2943
		Special Guests Will Backman and Scott Ruecker.
7017
		The 2007 BSDCan conference - Introduction of people.
2944
		Will's talks about his podcast bsdtalk and about
2945
		Linux and BSD in general. We are joined by Troels
2946
		also. Dann on Devede and hopes for MythTV. Scott
2947
		Ruecker talks about Scale and general linux and
2948
		lxer stuff.
2949
	    </desc>
7018
	    </desc>
2950
	    <tags>linux link tech show,talk,will backman</tags>
7019
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks</tags>
2951
	    <files>
7020
	    <files>
2952
		<file>
7021
		<file>
2953
		    <url>http://www.tllts.org/audio/tllts_179-02-14-07.mp3</url>
7022
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/Intro.mov</url>
2954
		    <size>31 Mb</size>
7023
		    <length>9 minutes</length>
2955
		    <length>120 minutes</length>
7024
		    <size>16 Mb</size>
2956
		    <desc>MP3 version</desc>
7025
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
2957
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
7026
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
2958
		</file>
7027
		</file>
2959
	    </files>
7028
	    </files>
2960
	</item>
7029
	</item>
2961
7030
2962
	<!-- Source: Ottawa Amateur Radio Club
7031
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070813">
2963
	-->
7032
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 - Videos</title>
2964
	<item source="oarc" added="20070219">
7033
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
2965
	    <title>Ham Radio on FreeBSD</title>
2966
	    <desc><![CDATA[
7034
	    <desc><![CDATA[
2967
		<p>
7035
		The 2007 BSDCan conference<br>
2968
		Last month I attended a meeting of the Ottawa Amateur
7036
		Kris Kennaway - Scalability Update 2007<br>
2969
		Radio Club (<a href="http://www.oarc.net/">OARC</a>)
7037
		Progress on FreeBSD SMP performance and scalablity
2970
		as a member of my local BUG was giving a presentation
7038
		since BSDCan Dev Summit 2006
2971
		on Ham Radio on FreeBSD. <a
7039
	    ]]></desc>
2972
		href="http://www.db.net/~db/about.html">Diane
7040
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks,kris kennaway,scalability</tags>
2973
		Bruce</a>, call sign VA3DB, has had her operator
2974
		license since 1969 and is well known in the BSD
2975
		community and for the development of ircd-hybrid.
2976
		In the past year she has assisted in the creation
2977
		of the <a
2978
		href="http://www.freshports.org/hamradio/">Hamradio
2979
		category in the FreeBSD ports tree</a> and has
2980
		become the maintainer of over 20 of the hamradio
2981
		ports.  She also contributed to the <a
2982
		href="http://www.hamsexy.com/wiki/index.php?title=FreeBSD&redirect=no">FreeBSD
2983
		entry at Hampedia</a>, the Wikipedia for ham
2984
		operators.
2985
		</p><p>
2986
		Her presentation slides are a great introduction
2987
		to the various ham utilities which are available,
2988
		including both descriptions and screenshots of the
2989
		utilities in action.
2990
		</p>
2991
		]]>
2992
	    </desc>
2993
	    <tags>oarc,presentation,radio,diane bruce</tags>
2994
	    <files>
7041
	    <files>
2995
		<file>
7042
		<file>
2996
		    <url>http://www.oarc.net/hamradio_on_freebsd.pdf</url>
7043
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/kris_kennaway-scalability.mov</url>
2997
		    <size>23 pages</size>
7044
		    <length>73 minutes</length>
2998
		    <desc>PDF file</desc>
7045
		    <size>148 Mb</size>
2999
		    <tags>mp3</tags>
7046
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
7047
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
3000
		</file>
7048
		</file>
3001
	    </files>
7049
	    </files>
3002
	</item>
7050
	</item>
3003
7051
3004
	<!-- Source: Linux and FreeBSD video tutorials. For everyone.
7052
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070813">
3005
	-->
7053
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 - Videos</title>
3006
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7054
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
3007
	    <title>Installing OpenBSD in 5 minutes</title>
7055
	    <desc><![CDATA[
3008
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/04/installing-openbsd-in-5-minutes.html</overview>
7056
		The 2007 BSDCan conference<br>
7057
		Qing Li - Routing, ARP and ND6
7058
	    ]]></desc>
7059
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks,qing li,routing arp and nd6</tags>
7060
	    <files>
7061
		<file>
7062
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/QingLi_Arp.mov</url>
7063
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
7064
		    <size>63 Mb</size>
7065
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
7066
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
7067
		</file>
7068
	    </files>
7069
	</item>
7070
7071
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070813">
7072
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 - Videos</title>
7073
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
7074
	    <desc><![CDATA[
7075
		The 2007 BSDCan conference<br>
7076
		Marko Zec explains the vimage architecture
7077
	    ]]></desc>
7078
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks,marko zec,vimage</tags>
7079
	    <files>
7080
		<file>
7081
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/marko-vimage.mov</url>
7082
		    <length>20 minutes</length>
7083
		    <size>44 Mb</size>
7084
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
7085
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
7086
		</file>
7087
	    </files>
7088
	</item>
7089
7090
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070813">
7091
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 - Videos</title>
7092
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/</overview>
7093
	    <desc><![CDATA[
7094
		The 2007 BSDCan conference<br>
7095
		Max Laier - PFIL, firewalls and locking
7096
	    ]]></desc>
7097
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,talks,max laier,ipf</tags>
7098
	    <files>
7099
		<file>
7100
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~julian/BSDCan-2007/max_ipf_pfil.mov</url>
7101
		    <length>30 minutes</length>
7102
		    <size>52 Mb</size>
7103
		    <desc>MOV file</desc>
7104
		    <tags>quicktime</tags>
7105
		</file>
7106
	    </files>
7107
	</item>
7108
7109
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070518">
7110
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos</title>
7111
	    <overview>http://gallery.keltia.net/v/voyages/conferences/bsdcan-2007/</overview>
3009
	    <desc>
7112
	    <desc>
3010
		Installing OpenBSD. In real time :)
7113
		Photos taken during both DevSummit and Conference at BSDCan 2007 in Ottawa by Ollivier Robert.
3011
	    </desc>
7114
	    </desc>
3012
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,openbsd</tags>
7115
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,ollivier robert</tags>
3013
	</item>
7116
	</item>
3014
7117
3015
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7118
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070519">
3016
	    <title>FreeBSD: Hard disk encryption</title>
7119
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Friday</title>
3017
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/02/freebsd-hard-disk-encryption.html</overview>
7120
	    <overview>http://www.db.net/gallery/BSDCan_2007_Friday/</overview>
3018
	    <desc>
7121
	    <desc>
3019
		How to protect your data on FreeBSD machine even
7122
		Photos taken during both DevSummit and Conference on Friday at BSDCan 2007 in Ottawa by Diane Bruce.
3020
		when your computer is turned off? This hard disk
3021
		encryption guide will help.
3022
	    </desc>
7123
	    </desc>
3023
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd,encryption</tags>
7124
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,diane bruce</tags>
3024
	</item>
7125
	</item>
3025
7126
3026
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7127
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070520">
3027
	    <title>FreeBSD: First time install and configure</title>
7128
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Saturday</title>
3028
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/01/freebsd-first-time-install-and.html</overview>
7129
	    <overview>http://www.db.net/gallery/BSDCan_2007_Saturday/</overview>
3029
	    <desc>
7130
	    <desc>
3030
		Tutorial how to install and configure FreeBSD. It
7131
		Photos taken during both DevSummit and Conference on Saturday at BSDCan 2007 in Ottawa by Diane Bruce.
3031
		seems that comments in video are in Japanese :)
3032
	    </desc>
7132
	    </desc>
3033
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd</tags>
7133
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,diane bruce</tags>
3034
	</item>
7134
	</item>
3035
7135
3036
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7136
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070524">
3037
	    <title>FreeBSD: using ports system</title>
7137
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Scott Murphy</title>
3038
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/01/freebsd-using-ports-system.html</overview>
7138
	    <overview>http://scott5.vox.com/library/post/bsdcan-2007-photos.html</overview>
3039
	    <desc>
7139
	    <desc>
3040
		Using ports system in FreeBSD to install etherape.
7140
		Photos taken at BSDCan 2007 by Scott Murphy
3041
	    </desc>
7141
	    </desc>
3042
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd,ports</tags>
7142
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,scott murphy</tags>
3043
	</item>
7143
	</item>
3044
7144
3045
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7145
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070524">
3046
	    <title>FreeBSD installation</title>
7146
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Julian C. Dunn</title>
3047
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/01/freebsd-installation.html</overview>
7147
	    <overview>http://www.aquezada.com/gallery/v/trips/bsdcan2007/</overview>
3048
	    <desc>
7148
	    <desc>
3049
		Step-by-step installation of FreeBSD operating system.
7149
		Photos taken at BSDCan 2007 by Julian C. Dunn
3050
	    </desc>
7150
	    </desc>
3051
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,freebsd</tags>
7151
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,julian c dunn</tags>
3052
	</item>
7152
	</item>
3053
7153
3054
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7154
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070524">
3055
	    <title>NetBSD and ssshfs</title>
7155
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Bjoern A. Zeeb</title>
3056
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/04/netbsd-and-ssshfs.html</overview>
7156
	    <overview>http://www.zabbadoz.net/users/bz/BSDCan2007/BSDCan2007-public/</overview>
3057
	    <desc>
7157
	    <desc>
3058
		Usage of ssshfs on NetBSD with PUFFS.
7158
		Photos taken at BSDCan 2007 by Bjoern A. Zeeb
3059
	    </desc>
7159
	    </desc>
3060
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,netbsd,puffs</tags>
7160
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,bjoern a zeeb</tags>
3061
	</item>
7161
	</item>
3062
7162
3063
	<item source="unixtutorial" added="20070503">
7163
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070524">
3064
	    <title>Install Debian and NetBSD on Xen Domu</title>
7164
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Randi Harper</title>
3065
	    <overview>http://unix-tutorial.blogspot.com/2007/04/install-debian-and-netbsd-on-xen-domu.html</overview>
7165
	    <overview>http://www.flickr.com/photos/freebsdgirl/sets/72157600230001160/</overview>
3066
	    <desc>
7166
	    <desc>
3067
		Video tutorial on installation of Debian and NetBsd on Domu with Xen.
7167
		Photos taken at BSDCan 2007 by Randi Harper
3068
	    </desc>
7168
	    </desc>
3069
	    <tags>unix-tutorial,flash,netbsd,xen,debian</tags>
7169
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,randi harper,freebsdgirl</tags>
7170
	</item>
7171
7172
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070524">
7173
	    <title>BSDCan-2007 Photos - Dru Lavigne</title>
7174
	    <overview>http://picasaweb.google.com/dru.lavigne/BSDCan2007</overview>
7175
	    <desc>
7176
		Photos taken at BSDCan 2007 by Dru Lavigne
7177
	    </desc>
7178
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,photos,dru lavigne</tags>
7179
	</item>
7180
7181
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070520">
7182
	    <title>The FreeBSD Security Officer function</title>
7183
	    <overview>http://people.freebsd.org/~simon/presentations/</overview>
7184
	    <desc>
7185
		"FreeBSD Security Officer function" at BSDCAN 2007 by Simon L. Nielsen (FreeBSD Deputy Security Officer)
7186
	    </desc>
7187
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,pdf,freebsd,security officer,simon l nielsen</tags>
7188
	    <files>
7189
		<file>
7190
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~simon/presentations/freebsd-so-function-bsdcan-2007.pdf</url>
7191
		    <size>252 Kb</size>
7192
		    <length>29 pages</length>
7193
		    <desc>PDF version</desc>
7194
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
7195
		</file>
7196
	    </files>
7197
	</item>
7198
7199
	<item source="bsdcan" added="20070520">
7200
	    <title>FreeBSD Portsnap</title>
7201
	    <overview>http://www.daemonology.net/papers/</overview>
7202
	    <desc><![CDATA[
7203
		"FreeBSD Portsnap - 
7204
		What (it is), Why (it was written), and How (it works)"
7205
		by Colin Percival (cperciva@FreeBSD.org)<br>
7206
		(Note: use ^L to get back in non-fullscreen mode)
7207
	    ]]></desc>
7208
	    <tags>bsdcan,bsdcan2007,pdf,portsnap,freebsd,colin percival</tags>
7209
	    <files>
7210
		<file>
7211
		    <url>http://www.daemonology.net/papers/bsdcan07.pdf</url>
7212
		    <size>1.3 Mb</size>
7213
		    <length>88 pages</length>
7214
		    <desc>PDF version</desc>
7215
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
7216
		</file>
7217
	    </files>
7218
	</item>
7219
7220
	<!-- BSDConTR
7221
	  -->
7222
	<item source="bsdcontr" added="20071031">
7223
	    <title>BSDConTR 2007 - Photos</title>
7224
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcontr.org/gallery/bsdcontr07/</overview>
7225
	    <desc>
7226
		Photos of the BSDConTR 2007
7227
	    </desc>
7228
	    <tags>bsdcontr,bsdcontr2007,photos</tags>
7229
	</item>
7230
7231
	<item source="bsdcontr" added="20071031">
7232
	    <title>BSDConTR 2007 - Presentations</title>
7233
	    <overview>http://www.bsdcontr.org/</overview>
7234
	    <desc>
7235
		Introducing FreeBSD 7.0
7236
	    </desc>
7237
	    <tags>bsdcontr,bsdcontr2007,pdf,freebsd 7.0,freebsd,kris kennaway</tags>
7238
	    <files>
7239
		<file>
7240
		    <url>http://people.freebsd.org/~kris/scaling/7.0%20Preview.pdf</url>
7241
		    <size>336 Kb</size>
7242
		    <length>37 pages</length>
7243
		    <desc>PDF version</desc>
7244
		    <tags>pdf</tags>
7245
		</file>
7246
	    </files>
3070
	</item>
7247
	</item>
3071
7248
3072
    </items>
7249
    </items>
3073
7250
7251
3074
    <sources>
7252
    <sources>
3075
	<source id="bsdtalk">
7253
	<source id="bsdtalk">
3076
	    <name>bsdtalk</name>
7254
	    <name>bsdtalk</name>
Lines 3192-3196 Link Here
3192
	    <url>http://www.asiabsdcon.org/</url>
7370
	    <url>http://www.asiabsdcon.org/</url>
3193
	</source>
7371
	</source>
3194
7372
7373
	<source id="linuxreality">
7374
	    <name>linuxreality - a podcast for the new linux user</name>
7375
	    <url>http://www.linuxreality.com/</url>
7376
	</source>
7377
7378
	<source id="berklix">
7379
	    <name>Berklix.com Computer Services</name>
7380
	    <url>http://www.berklix.com/</url>
7381
	</source>
7382
7383
	<source id="sitescollide">
7384
	    <name>Sites Collide</name>
7385
	    <url>http://www.sitescollide.com/</url>
7386
	</source>
7387
7388
	<source id="bsdcan">
7389
	    <name>BSDCan - The Technical BSD Conference</name>
7390
	    <url>http://www.bsdcan.org/</url>
7391
	</source>
7392
7393
	<source id="bsdcontr">
7394
	    <name>BSDConTR - Turkish Conference on BSD Systems</name>
7395
	    <url>http://www.bsdcontr.org/</url>
7396
	</source>
7397
7398
	<source id="fosdem">
7399
	    <name>Free and Open Source Software Developers' European Meeting</name>
7400
	    <url>http://fosdem.org/</url>
7401
	</source>
7402
7403
	<source id="meetbsd">
7404
	    <name>MeetBSD</name>
7405
	    <url>http://www.meetbsd.org/</url>
7406
	</source>
7407
7408
	<source id="bsdconspain">
7409
	    <name>BSDCon Spain</name>
7410
	    <url>http://www.bsdcon.net/</url>
7411
	</source>
7412
7413
	<source id="googletechtalks">
7414
	    <name>Google Tech Talks</name>
7415
	    <url><![CDATA[
7416
		http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=type%3Agoogle+engEDU&so=1
7417
	    ]]></url>
7418
	</source>
7419
3195
    </sources>
7420
    </sources>
3196
</multimedia>
7421
</multimedia>

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