[talk] Fwd: [announce] NYC*BUG Upcoming
George Rosamond
george at ceetonetechnology.com
Wed Feb 4 09:09:22 EST 2015
Forwarding for those *not* on the announce@ list... although you should be.
There is no meeting tonight. Rather, the February meeting is next
Tuesday, Feb 10.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [announce] NYC*BUG Upcoming
Date: Wed, 04 Feb 2015 09:06:40 -0500
From: NYC*BUG Announcements <announce at lists.nycbug.org>
REMINDER: There is NO NYC*BUG meeting tonight, even though it's the
first Wednesday of the month. The February meeting will be next
Tuesday, the 10th.
******
Tuesday, Feb 10, 645 PM
Life with an OpenBSD Laptop, Issac ".ike" Levy
Stone Creek Bar & Lounge
140 E 27th Street east of Lexington Avenue
Have you ever been OpenBSD-curious?
"OpenBSD is thought of by many security professionals as the most secure
UNIX-like operating system, as the result of a never-ending
comprehensive source code security audit." Yet, whether OpenBSD is right
for you is a question that only you can answer.
I'll share my practical experiences transitioning from Mac life to
OpenBSD- the good, bad, and the ugly. For over 15 years, Mac OSX was
"the computer I physically touch". I build infrastructure, and the
computers I care about most, I rarely physically touch- servers on the
internet. These servers provide me the leading edge of computer
security, networking, cryptography, filesystems- all from Open and
auditable codebases...
I decided I'd had enough with my laptop being the ironic weakest link in
my digital ecosystem.
Forget religious debates about Operating Systems- I simply set out to
build an Open Source, Stable, Securable, and full-featured laptop. And I
was delighted that id doesn't suck to use!
Speaker Bio
Isaac (.ike) Levy is a crusty UNIX Hacker.
A long-time community contributor to the *BSD's,ike is obsessed with
high-availability and redundant networked servers systems, mostly
because he likes to sleep at night. Standing on the shoulders of giants,
his background includes partnering to run a Virtual Server ISP before
anyone called it a cloud, as well as having a long history building
internet-facing infrastructure with UNIX systems.
.ike has been a part of NYC*BUG since it was first launched in January
2004. He was a long-time member of the Lower East Side Mac Unix User
Group, and is still in denial that this group no longer exists. He has
spoken frequently on a number of UNIX and internet security topics at
various venues, particularly on the topic of FreeBSD's jail(8).
*******
Wednesday, March 4, 645 PM
The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System, George
Neville-Neil
Stone Creek Bar & Lounge
140 E 27th Street east of Lexington Avenue
Book Release Event for "The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD
Operating System" with George Neville-Neil
The March meeting will be a special launch meeting for the recent
release of "The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating
System." George Neville-Neil, one of the three authors, will be speaking
on DTrace, which is covered in the book. Copies of the book will be for
sale and giveaway. Prentice Hall, the publisher, will be sponsoring hors
d'oeuvres.
DTrace is the tool of choice for debugging and performance tuning
systems running on FreeBSD. Originally developed for the Solaris
operating system, DTrace was ported to FreeBSD and has been developed
and enhanced within FreeBSD ever since. Used by both systems
administrators and developers, this talk will discuss both how DTrace
works, as described in the latest edition of "The Design and
Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System" as well as how to
effectively use the system to monitor systems and diagnose problems.
Speaker Bio
George Neville-Neil works on networking and operating system code for
fun and profit. He also teaches various courses on subjects related to
computer programming. His professional areas of interest include code
spelunking, operating systems, networking, time and security. He is the
co-author with Marshall Kirk McKusick and Robert Watson of The Design
and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System and is the columnist
behind ACM Queue's "Kode Vicious." He serves as a Director of the
non-profit, FreeBSD Foundation.
He earned his bachelor's degree in computer science at Northeastern
University in Boston, Massachusetts, and is a member of the ACM, the
USENIX Association and the IEEE. He is an avid bicyclist and traveler
who currently resides in New York City.
*****
AsiaBSDCon is March 12-15 in Tokyo, Japan
BSDCan is June 12-13 in Ottawa, Canada. Registration opens in early March.
Start making your plans now.
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