Hong Phuc Dang (FOSSASIA)
Welcome
Welcome to the 8th year of FOSSASIA. A friendly community of Open Technologists meets at the Science Centre Singapore.
About Hong Phuc Dang:
Hong Phuc, originally from Vietnam, has lived in the US, Singapore and Berlin. She was a speaker at the Chaos Communication Congress presenting the latest advances in Open Fashion and Technology. She is also the founder of FOSSASIA, the Asia organization bringing together an inspiring community across borders and ages to form a better future with Open Technologies and ICT. Hong Phuc organizes events like the annual FOSSASIA summit since 2009 and puts together Science Hackdays across the region in Vietnam, Dubai and China.
Mario Behling (MBM)
Program Overview
The FOSSASIA OpenTechSummit 2016 welcomes more than 200 speakers, in over 300 Sessions, 16 tracks, with 3 Tech Kids tracks, hosted in the wonderful venue of the Science Centre Singapore. How we got here, who are our partners today and why we need the - Open - Internet of Things.
About Mario Behling:
Mario Behling is a German born technologist with more than a decade of experience in software development and start ups. He helped to get the lubuntu community started, and as the founder of FOSSASIA and the OpenTechSummit, he works closely with International partners to develop open ICT solutions for social change in countries such as Afghanistan, Vietnam and Cambodia. Mario presently works on the big data startup loklak from his Berlin base. He also continues to cooperate with organizations like the UNESCO, Mozilla and Intel.
Lim Tit Meng (Science Centre Singapore)
Host Welcome
The Science Centre Singapore (Abbreviation: SCS, Chinese: 新加坡科学馆), is a scientific institution in Singapore, specialising in the promotion of scientific and technological education for the general public. With over 850 exhibits spread over eight exhibition galleries, it sees over a million visitors a year today.
About Lim Tit Meng:
TM was given Tit in his name because his father wanted to put him on a straight path (Tit is straight in Teochew). According to Dad, he looked bright as a new born (hence named Meng, which means bright), but Dad suspected that he might grow up becoming a bad guy! TM has been the Chief Executive at the Science Centre Singapore since January 2010. He is a Singaporean, graduated with a doctorate from the University of Cambridge in UK after obtaining a BSc (Hons) degree from the National University of Singapore. He is a husband of one, father of two, and known to be a straight talker, befitting the Tit. :-)
Harish Pillay (RedHat)
Keynote of 20 minutes
About Harish Pillay:
Harish Pillay is the president of the Internet Society Singapore Chapter. He is a pioneer on the Internet having gotten on to the ARPAnet and UUCP networks in 1985. He is a ham and his callsign is 9V1HP.
Bunnie Huang (Sutajio Ko-Usagi PTE LTD)
Talk of 20 minutes
Last year at Burning Man 2015, we demonstrated an open hardware & software, 900 MHz radio-connected platform based on our Orchard IoT platform in the form of a conference badge. The badges bore a circular set of LEDs which would flash in a pattern unique to that badge. Attendees with other badges customized their light patterns by finding badges with patterns they like and "having sex" with them. The description of the light patterns is based on a diploid genome, and the process of breeding lights is modeled after the biological process of having sex. The overall protocol to exchange light genomes was designed to require explicit consent of both parties, thus layering a social experiment on top of a hardware experiment. By requiring explicit consent, the badges also served as an icebreaker and a seed for many fun conversations.
About Bunnie Huang:
bunnie huang is best known for his work hacking the Microsoft Xbox, as well as for his efforts in designing and manufacturing open source hardware, including the chumby (app-playing alarm clock), chibitronics (peel-and-stick electronics for craft), and Novena (DIY laptop). He received his PhD in electrical engineering from MIT in 2002. He currently lives in Singapore, where he runs a private product design studio, Kosagi, and he actively mentors several startups and students of the MIT Media Lab.
Bernard Leong (Singapore Post)
Talk of 20 minutes
The story of how SingPost built the drone delivery system & gain global coverage in 3 months.
About Bernard Leong:
Dr Bernard Leong is the Head of Digital Services for Singapore Post Pte Ltd, overseeing the Group’s digital, mobile & social media strategy, along products and innovation across the organization with the recent authenticated drone delivery system that received world wide coverage. When not donning his corporate hat, Dr Leong plays a key role in the Southeast Asia’s entrepreneurial ecosystem, serving as Entrepreneur-in-Residence at INSEAD Business School and mentor for JFDI.Asia, the region’s leading startup incubator. He is the founder of a weekly podcast called Analyse.Asia where he discussed the latest trends in business, technology and media in Asia.
Davide Storti, ITO Misako (UNESCO)
Keynote of 20 minutes
The YouthMobile Initiative builds on the experience of many worldwide initiatives that introduce young people to computer science programming (learning-to-code) and problem solving (coding-to-learn). It also seeks to build on experiences targeting young women who are vastly underrepresented in this field. Finally it builds on the consideration that for millions of young people, the smartphone in their pocket is a very powerful computer, it will be their only computer, and they use it for nearly every aspect of their lives: communicating, learning, taking pictures, and playing games.
About Davide Storti, ITO Misako:
WHO BENEFITS FROM YOUTHMOBILE? »Youth and Youth organizations Informal learning opportunities for youth to engage in society and earn livelihoods as mobile app entrepreneurs. ICT-enabled youth organizations creating a sustainable pool of trainers, support staff, and mentors. »Secondary School Students Acquiring high-level 21st century skills and confidence to develop/promote mobile apps to resolve local issues of sustainable development. »Teachers and Principals Teaching a new, innovative course in mobile apps development, acquiring ICT-pedagogy skills, connecting the school to other schools nationally and globally. » By gathering training materials to teach young people to develop mobile apps. The materials will be high-level and open-licensed for translation, localization, and innovations. Training materials will be pedagogically accurate for accreditation and employer recognition. » By training teachers to teach the students. UNESCO will be identifying all schools worldwide with existing programs for advanced computer studies. » By linking the learners to mobile app competitions, through the creation of the first global list of app competitors: encouraging trained students to submit apps for prizes, recognition, and employment opportunities; and let them meet and learn from those who made it.
Cat Allman (Google)
Keynote of 20 minutes
Recognizing the vital role that open source software plays at Google, the Open Source Programs Office is tasked with maintaining a healthy relationship with the open source software development community.
About Cat Allman:
Cat is the Science Outreach Program Manager at Google. She manages outreach to the global FOSS community with her team. They run student programs such as Google Summer of Code and Google Code-in, sponsor and host FOSS project events, and fund a wide variety of projects. She speaks at conferences, and in her spare time is a co-organizer and the logistics lead for Science Foo Camp, an annual invitation-only un-conference for scientists. This "spare time" activity has turned into a 2nd team to manage around outreach to science and maker communities.
Jan Nikolai Nelles (Artist of "The Other Nefertiti")
Talk of 20 minutes
“The Other Nefertiti” is an artistic intervention by Jan Nikolai Nelles and Nora Al- Badri which went viral. “With the data leak as a part of this counter narrative within our investigative practice we want to activate the artefact, to inspire a critical re-assessment of today’s conditions and to overcome the colonial notion of possession in Germany's museums”. With regard to the notion of belonging and possession of material objects of other cultures, the artists intention is to make cultural objects publicly accessible and to promote a contemporary and critical approach on how the “Global North“ deals with heritage and the representation of “the Other”. “We should tell stories of entanglement and Nefertiti is a great case to start with to tell stories from very different angles and to see how they intertwine.“ At this link you will find a torrent to access the dataset under a public domain: http://nefertitihack.alloversky.com Here is the video showing the scanning process: https://vimeo.com/148156899 “The Other Nefertiti” is a conceptual art piece questioning singularity and originality as well as ownership of material objects of other cultures. Nora Al-Badri and Jan Nikolai Nelles went to the Neues Museum and scanned the iconic bust, but of course nobody knows if even this is the original bust. Through time and restoration there might not much genuine be left of the artifact itself. We give meaning to objects as well as we give meaning to data. Why worshipping the original, while we have all that beautiful remixes as of today? Maybe it was a server hack, a copy scan, an inside job, the cleaner, a hoax, but who cares, first of all it is an art piece. Of course a scan of the same thing looks the same, doesn't it? And tomorrow everybody with cameras or smartphones or Xbox will have the means and technique, where one can reclaim the interpretational sovereignty through scanning and sharing. What the artists strived to achieve is a vivid discussion about the notion of possession and belonging of history in our museums and our minds. A discussion on the originality and truth of data as well as material objects is necessary, because in the end one concludes, that the institutional practice of todays museums and collections all around the Western world are corrupted. Museums are telling fictional stories, their stories, just because they control the artifacts and the way of representation. The fetishization of sacred staged artifacts and the Disneyfication is producing capital value for illicit trading and looting artifacts. One can't find a reflection about violent entanglement of the museums and their inherent colonial patina themselves. But isn't representing “The Other” always violent? Art is about building new narratives, deconstructing power relations, not scanning techniques... .
About Jan Nikolai Nelles:
Jan Nikolai Nelles is a multi-disciplinary artist based in Berlin. He graduated from Offenbach University of Art and Design in 2011. His work oscillates between visual and media art. In the past he founded an independent art gallery in Offenbach, Germany, and co-founded a photography magazine. Since 2009, he also collaborates with Nora Al-Badri on several artistic interventions.
Lunch Catering at Hall A, Scientist for a Day. Speakers Lunch in the Marquee Theatre tent.
Mike McQuaid (GitHub/Homebrew)
Talk of 20 minutes
Managing an open-source community is easy when your project is small but grows harder the larger your project becomes. Learn from Mike McQuaid, Homebrew maintainer for 6 years and GitHub employee, about how to grow your project’s community and ensure that it remains a healthy, happy and fun place.
About Mike McQuaid:
Mike McQuaid is a software engineer at GitHub. He maintains the Homebrew OS X package manager and has contributed to a wide array of open-source projects.
Lennart Poettering (Red Hat)
Talk of 20 minutes
systemd is a core component of most Linux distributions and the Linux platform. If you run any of today's bigger distribution you'll come into contact with it. In this talk I'd like to give an overview over recent additions and changes.
About Lennart Poettering:
Lennart works in the Server Experience Group at Red Hat, and lives in Berlin.
Meng Weng Wong (Legalese.io)
Talk of 20 minutes
Legalese helps entrepreneurs take the law into their own hands, by turning contracts into templates, configuration, and code – all on Github. Instead of paying lawyers for access to their proprietary precedents, founders and freelancers can use opensource tools to draft their own NDAs, ESOPs, and angel/seed investment agreements. After a short demo of the system we escalate quickly into a review of the 30-year history of legal informatics, deontic calculi, and programming language theory which Legalese is now productizing with its own DSL.
About Meng Weng Wong:
Meng started and exited two startups in the US. Returning to Singapore, he perpetuated the cycle of abuse as an angel investor and mentor at JFDI.Asia. At JFDI, in the course of developing a portfolio of 60+ startups, Meng had to help draft and execute dozens of legal agreements for each startup. To his horror he discovered startup financing is currently a manual process involving corporate secretaries and expensive lawyers, hence a ripe opportunity for software innovation and the basis for an opensource startup serving a global market. Meng programs in Perl and Javascript, and is now learning Prolog, Clojure, and Haskell.
David Crellin (ScienceScope Ltd)
Talk of 20 minutes
ScienceScope Ltd is a tier 1 partner in the BBC micro:bit development program. This novel coding device will be delivered to every 11 year old students in the UK in the next month. It features sensors, Bluetooth Smart and a 5x5 matrix led display. This development will be a game changer in inspiring students to engage with technology.
About David Crellin:
David was educated at Bristol, and Cambridge Universities. In 1982 He joined PA’s, Technology division where he was responsible for managing a number of major electronic product development projects. In 1986 David set up his own business (Abington Partners). Abington originated data-logging software and hardware for schools. The company has won three SMART awards. In 2011 Abington Partners transferred the educational datalogging products business was to a new company. ScienceScope Ltd with David as CEO. The range and extent of the educational datalogging products range has grown to be one of the most innovative and comprehensive available. In 2013 ScienceScope won an £800,000 Technology Strategy Board funded project (DISTANCE) to develop an Internet of School Things (IOST) demonstrator. Partners in the project include Intel, xively and three UK universities, University College London , The Open University and Birmingham. ScienceScope is currently working with the IDA in Singapore to carry out a proof of concept project for the IOST. ScienceScope is also a key partner of the BBC in delivering the micro:bit project. The micro:bit is a nano computer designed to inspire kids to get involved in coding. Every student aged 11 in the UK will get a free micro:bit at the beginning of 2016. David lives with his wife in Bath.
Ricky Setyawan (MySQL)
Talk of 20 minutes
The IoT is poised to change how we interact with and perceive the world around us, and the possibilities are nearly boundless. As more and more connected devices generate data, we will need to solve the problem of how to collect, store, and make sense of IoT data by leveraging the power of database systems. MySQL 5.7 is the best release ever of the world's most popular open source database and provides a new, advanced feature set designed to enable those who are building the next generation of web-based and embedded applications and services including IoT and BigData.
About Ricky Setyawan:
Ricky Setyawan has been in the IT industry for 17 years with the good last 15 years working as RDBMS specialist. He is currently MySQL Principal Sales Consultant for Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei and Pakistan. Prior to joining Oracle, he was a Principal DBA doing database design and management on Oracle and DB2 on RedHat Linux on continuous availability server. He has been working on a number of RDBMS throughout his career such as Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, and MySQL.
William Hooi (ESPert)
Talk of 20 minutes
Introducing our very own Espresso Lite V2, the latest Arduino-compatible ESP8266 Wi-Fi development board for makers and novice learners to build their very own Internet-of-Things (IoT) projects.
About William Hooi:
William Hooi is currently the CEO of Espert Pte Ltd, a new start-up venture that develop Wi-Fi-enabled (ESP8266-based) development and production hardware as well as cloud and mobile SDK to help makers to build their own IoT product, solutions and services. Previously, he was involved in organising the annual Singapore Mini Maker Faire while he was with the Science Centre Singapore. Having served in the public school system in various capacities for the past 15 years, he started his own private practice 2 years ago to create platforms for citizen innovation for the Maker Movement. He is also concurrently the Executive Director of the SG Makers Association and a director of the OneMaker Group, a maker ecosystem developer in Singapore.
Level 3, Dalton Hall
Praveen Patil (ExpEYES)
Talk of 20 minutes
This presentation is about the Sensor Plug-ins developed for ExpEYES: Pocket Science Lab as a part of my GSoC-2015 project with FOSSASIA. We have added many new sensors plug-ins to measure a variety of parameters like temperature, pressure, humidity, wind speed, acceleration, tilt angle, magnetic field etc. With this development we at FOSSASIA are aiming to provide low-cost, effective and open source laboratory equipment to students all over the world. I will also be talking about the low-cost weather data-acquisition system developed and interfacing Gas sensors with ExpEYES. A Poster covering details of GSoC work will also be displayed at the venue. In the end I will add little about my experience of GSoC journey with my mentors Mario Behling, Hong Phuc Dang and Andre Rebentisch, with some critical piece of knowledge or a new lesson to learn everyday…..this may encourage and help future GsoC students.
About Praveen Patil:
A Physics Teacher and a free software enthusiast. FOSSASIA GSoC student alumnus and GCI mentor. Working on ExpEYES: Pocket Science Lab, Involved in FOSS training programs for science teachers and students. E-content developer for National Repository of Open Educational Resources (NROER) for School Education and member of committee for “Development of ICT Refresher Course for students and teachers”by Central Institute of Education Technology (CIET), NCERT, New Delhi. Talks at International Events: FOSSASIA - 2014 at Phnom Penh, Cambodia RMLL-2014 at Montpellier, France FOSSASIA -2015 at NUS Singapore PyCon Sg at Singapore
Manan Wason (IIIT Delhi)
Workshop of 2 hours
This workshop will be for students from 12-17. We plan to teach them some basics of android by doing a sample android project.
About Manan Wason:
This will be a workshop in which we plan to teach students some basics of android by writing code for a sample project. We will be also covering some material design basics and basic android architecture.
Jamen Loh (OneMaker Group)
Workshop of 2 hours
In this 2 hour workshop, we will be introducing the idea of Design Making and how it can be relevant to Education today.Design Making is an approach to problem solving with a focus on making-and-iterating. Tapping on the idea of Design Thinking, making turns concepts into actual prototypes and getting it to market for feedback allows robust iterations to happen for a better product-demand fit.
About Jamen Loh:
Participants experience the prototyping and iteration stages of Design Thinking, working on proposed challenge statements after which they will start prototyping. The solutions will be subjected to a round of feedbacks before improving them on a second iteration which will see vast improvements from the first version. This program is suitable for participants from 12 and above.
Shivam Verma (Ambient Dynamix/National University of Singapore)
Talk of 20 minutes
Dynamix enables mobile apps and Web apps to fluidly interact with the physical world through advanced sensing, control and actuation plug-ins that can be installed into the user’s Android device on-demand. A Dynamix-enabled device can also serve as a gateway between mutually incompatible smart devices that are situated in the user’s environment. 1. Overview of the Framework 2. Features 3. Plugin Development Overview 4. Web Integration 5. Simple Demo
Jiin Joo Ong (Garuda Robotics)
Workshop of 1 hour
Get your hands dirty with various open source software for working with drones, including DroneKit, MAVLink, and Mission Planner.
About Jiin Joo Ong:
Ong Jiin Joo is the co-founder and CTO of Singapore-based drone solutions and services company, Garuda Robotics.
Parmeshwr Prasad Vishwakarma (dell)
Talk of 20 minutes
NVDIMM is very hot topic now a days. It has many fabulous features. One of them is namespaces. NVDIMM support block and persistent memory name spaces. Both has different advantages and use cases. Namespaces may have attributes unavailable through other means, like different block sizes for block devices, the choice of powerfail write atomicity, and the ability. Let’s understand block window, BTT, SPA and their challenges in this session. I will cover how NVDIMM is solving modern memory requirement. Based on its ability to fill the gap between cache memory and SSD. I will cover how Linux community is proceeding to solve namespaces in NVDIMM.
About Parmeshwr Prasad Vishwakarma:
Parmeshwr Prasad is associated with Dell server Division from past 3 years. He is having varied experience in embedded system, servers, cloud and Open Source. He has been an active Linux kernel developer for more than 7 years. Keen passion for continuous learning, innovation and adoption of new ideas from lateral technology domains. Patents across diverse areas covering UEFI, ESRT and PCIe. He was the speaker for open source events like CentOS-dojo, ESTF and OSIdays.
Level 1, Eco Garden Lab
Shwetank Dixit (Opera)
Talk of 20 minutes
The number of electronic devices we have around us is gigantic. We need a new interaction model to deal with all these devices, and having a separate native app for each device is impractical. The concept of the ‘Physical Web’ attempts to assign devices with their very own URL, which can be accessed by everyone using their web browser. This opens up a lot of possibilities for developers to create new and amazing applications, taking the user’s immediate physical presence into play. We’ll take a look at some use cases, including, but not limited to treasure hunts, contact sharing and indoor navigation. We’ll dive deep into how JavaScript can be used along with Bluetooth-LE and the Eddystone protocol to create great web apps, and understand the concepts at hand.
About Shwetank Dixit:
Shwetank is PM of the Extensions platform in Opera as well as part of Opera's Developer Relations team. Over the years, he was worked to evangelize open web standards and cutting edge web technologies. He has written technical articles for a variety of publications and regularly talks at various developer conferences around the world.
Kushal Das (Fedora Project)
Talk of 20 minutes
Micro Bit (or micro:bit) is an ARM-based embedded system designed by the BBC for use in computer education in the UK. It will be given to every 11 year old student in UK. MicroPython is an "official" solution for the micro:bit. The Python Software Foundation are one of the partners in the project and the BBC asked us to provide such a solution (ntoll is leading the efforts from the PSF side of things). "Mu" is a community generated (i.e. from the Python community) editor that *initially* targets the micro:bit. In the wider Python context, there's been talk of a kid/teacher/beginner friendly editor that's recommended for Python "in general". Plans are afoot to make "mu" meet this requirement.
About Kushal Das:
Kushal Das is a core developer of CPython, and a fellow at Python Software Society. He is a long time Fedora contributor. He is currently working as Fedora Cloud Engineer in the Fedora Engineering team at Red Hat.
Red Hat Family (Red Hat)
Talk of 20 minutes
Lots of Open Source technologies are developed by Red Hat. Our applications are used in companies around the world.
Level 3, Planck Lab
Yaniv Bronhaim (Red Hat)
Talk of 20 minutes
Yaniv will present overview of oVirt, Foreman and Katello, then will dive into how oVirt integrates with Foreman and Katello to ease different flows in variant systems and data-centers. oVirt 3.5 integration with Foreman allows us to bring new bare-metal hardware to a fully operational hypervisor in one click. In oVirt 3.6 we introduce an integration with Katello to allow oVirt users to see available updates (ERRATA) on hosts and VMs that are managed by Foreman, and in addition on the oVirt engine machine itself. This gives oVirt users a wider view of the updates available for both the virtualized and infrastructure resources. The integration between the projects is still in progress and we plan add functionality to it for better management options for various entities in the data-center hardware - such as provision phase, package management, configurations control and upgrade flows.
About Yaniv Bronhaim:
The audience require basic knowledge with virtualization and hardware provisioning - mostly aimed for users, ITs and product managers.
Amit Shah (Red Hat)
Talk of 20 minutes
Containers and Docker are quite the rage, and people are comparing to the their lightweight approach compared with traditional virtualization (e.g. with KVM). This talk will dispel some myths, and introduce the concepts of hardware- and operating-system- level virtualization. Will also list pros and cons of both the approaches.
About Amit Shah:
Amit has been working on KVM virtualization for the last 8 years, and has been working on Linux for more than 15 years. He has worked on Free Software for most of his professional life.
Parag Ashok Nemade (Red Hat)
Talk of 20 minutes
Globalization is a collaborative work done by internationalizing, localizing your software. Most developers write software code but they used to forgot to internationalize their software. This talk will present what is mean by Globalization, why is it important. Then we will look at what Localization is and how to add internationalization in your code by showing some code examples. We will look into what translation platforms are available which is also important part of Globalization.
About Parag Ashok Nemade:
Parag Nemade is a Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat. Parag has 10 years of experience in Open Source and Linux. He has worked on developing open source softwares related to Internationalization. He is an active contributor to Fedora project, sponsor for packager group, provenpackager, helped in improving Fedora packaging, testing Fedora updates. He is also currently working in Fedora Engineering Steering Committee. He has been working since many years helping new contributors to become Fedora packagers and existing contributors in reviewing their new packages in Fedora.
Lennart Poettering (Red Hat)
Talk of 20 minutes
Containers are a hot topic on Linux. In this talk I'd like to give a quick overview what systemd provides in the area of containers, how it integrates with the various container managers, and how to use systemd's own minimal container manager systemd-nspawn. I'd like to specifically focus on the more recent changes in the area, and how this functionality has been adopted by the rkt container runtime.
About Lennart Poettering:
Lennart works in the Server Experience Group at Red Hat, and lives in Berlin.
Viral B. Shah (Julia Computing)
Talk of 20 minutes
Julia is a high-level, high-performance dynamic programming language for technical computing, with syntax that is familiar to users of other technical computing environments. It provides a sophisticated compiler, distributed parallel execution, numerical accuracy, and an extensive mathematical function library.
About Viral B. Shah:
Co-author of @RebootingIndia. Co-inventor of @JuliaLanguage. Founding Partner of Julia Computing, Inc and @FourthLion_IN.
Marco A. Gutiérrez (Robolab, University of Extremadura, Spain)
Talk of 60 minutes
Open Detection (OD) is a novel standalone open source project for object detection and recognition in images and 3D point clouds. Open Detection is released under the terms of the BSD license, and thus free for commercial and research use. The project was originated under Google Summer of Code 2015 with the aim of having a vision tool for robotics (in particular for Robocomp, an open source robotics framework). The library is built with a very specific goal - to answer the fundamental problem of Computer Vision - Object Recognition and Detection. We make available to everyone the existing solution in this direction in a common, intuitive and user-friendly APIs. Our simple and user-friendly APIs make this a great tool for Robotics Applications and robots and Computer Vision beginners and enthusiasts. And of course, the method dependent parameters to fine-tune detections to the limit, makes this a great tool for Computer Vision researchers and experts.
About Marco A. Gutiérrez:
Marco A. Gutiérrez is a PhD student in cognitive vision for robotics systems at the Robotics and Artificial Vision Laboratory (RoboLab) from the University of Extremadura, Spain since 2011. He is currently holding an A*STAR Research Attachment Programme (ARAP) scholarship in the Human Language Technology Department at I2R, A*STAR, Singapore. He has contributed to several open-source robotics and computer vision related projects like RoboComp and the Point Cloud Library as organization administrator and mentor (respectively) for several editions of the Google Summer of Code programme (2013, 2014 and 2015).
Ankita Shukla (IIT Roorkee)
Talk of 20 minutes
I developed an extension - Collaborative Spelling Dictionary, during my intern with the Wikimedia Foundation under the Outreach program of Gnome. After my intern, I created issues in the same extension for newbies to fix and guided them constantly giving them an easy and smooth entry into the open source community. I also mentored the extension's issues in Google Code In this year and had several students submitting their patches for the same, successfully closing number of the open issues. I'll use the opportunity to explain and demonstrate this extension to the FOSSASIA attendees and talk about the step by step process involved in building an extension. This would particularly be useful for anyone aiming to work on and develop extensions to be used for any wiki-project (which are already quite popular these days). Moreover, the extension still has scope for further development. In order to be able to contribute to the extension, it is important to understand how the extension works currently, so I would like to explain about this project and its code architecture and also discuss the possible features and their implementations during my talk. I also plan on giving a demo of my work on my laptop (if time allows) so that the audience gets a better idea about the project.
About Ankita Shukla:
Ankita is a Computer Science senior at Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee. She has been a contributor to FOSS for almost 3 years now. In 2014, she interned with Wikimedia under Gnome’s Outreach Program for Women (now Outreachy) on a project entitled “Collaborative Spelling Dictionary”. Ankita mentored for Mediawiki projects this year at Google Code In 2015 and Gnome Outreachy. She’s also guiding two high-school mentees under the #include fellowship program this year.
U-Zyn Chua (Zynesis)
Talk of 40 minutes
This talk will cover: 1. Visualization on near-real-time data on Singapore taxi with sharing of observable trends. 2. Heavy obfuscation of this public API by LTA. 3. Serverless architecture: How the whole system, consisting of data collection engine, unobfuscated API endpoints, database and visualization, is built without without having to spin up a single server.
About U-Zyn Chua:
U-Zyn's primary interests are blockchain, sysops and security. He runs Zynesis, a sysops and blockchain consultancy, during the day and hacks around at night.
Level 3, Fermi Lab
Michael Christen (YaCy.net)
Talk of 20 minutes
I have worked as a contractor for the leading European fashion retailers and analysed Big Data of their competitors. What do you want to know about it?
About Michael Christen:
I made YaCy and loklak
Maxime Pourrat (Winnow Solutions)
Talk of 20 minutes
https://youtu.be/HNrfr4Mp-Wk
About Maxime Pourrat:
Maxime has more than a decade of experience in Hospitality, Private Equity, Startups and MNCs spanning from Beijing to London, Geneva and Singapore. He first move to Asia to join Kempsinki Hotels in Beijing with their Asia business development team. Following this he worked at one of China's first foreign-owned private equity firms. He managed portfolio investments in F&B and tech start-ups. Prior to Winnow Solutions, he worked in project management at Caterpillar where he realised it was time to return where he belongs - Asia and the Startup world.
Level 2, Einstein Room
Herr Flupke (🐰)
Talk of 20 minutes
As the internet trickles through society it starts to transform the very places where people live. Some think it can change cities in this century as much as electricity did in the last one. The governments of the world, the weary giants of flesh and steel, also tap into this new home. This talk will step away from the computer screen to look at the design patterns of current toolchains for the so-called "smart city" and their implications. Is there a way the free/libre open (source software) spirit can be baked into the infrastructure that society runs on?
About Herr Flupke:
herr flupke explains machines to humans and humans to machines. His work involves security and privacy, community and ethics.
Alexander Couzens (freelancer)
Talk of 20 minutes
Who controls the hardware own's the hardware! Vendors taking more and more power of our devices with no return for us - the end user. They want to decide what software it runs on the hardware they sell to us. Why? Because of security. Security means to prevent the user from owning the device and gives the vendor more power to feel good. This security also restricts the usage of hardware to a certain use case. The open source world has shown there are a lot more use cases than advertised with any given hardware. The talk also gives a short overview of coreboot and how coreboot can solve some problems.
About Alexander Couzens:
I'm an open source developer doing low level delelopment like OpenWrt and coreboot.
Norvan Vogt (Queensland Health)
Workshop of 1 hour
Organisational budgets are shrinking and stakeholders are putting increasing pressure on public sector organisations to be efficient without jeopardising service delivery. There is a multitude of ways to share and reuse software amongst organisations and the public sector employs (and has employed) a variety of different approaches. This session will specifically focus on open source software and the factors influencing the adoption of open source software within public sector organisations. The primary objective of the session is to explore open source software benefits for public sector organisations, discuss the current state of adoption, and review the motivators and a-motivators affecting adoption. A secondary objective of the session is to investigate where organisations are utilising open source software and whether organisations consider open source software as a means of achieving business goals.
About Norvan Vogt:
Norvan is passionate about open source technology and using ICT to make a difference in the world. At age 18, Norvan co-founded an open source software company in Canberra. In 2004, he was responsible for leading the campaign that concluded with the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) legislative assembly changing legislation, where they are preferencing open source software during procurement. Furthermore, Norvan has spent at least five years working internationally on ICT projects, creating open source solutions through community development methodologies, for the United Nations, AusAID and the World Bank, in Vanuatu, Cambodia and Guatemala. Norvan has served in a range of high level advisory roles, such as the Prime Minister’s Youth Roundtable, Defence Reserves Support Council and the United Nations International Symposium on Volunteering. He is currently employed by Townsville Hospital as the Chief Information Officer for the health district and is also studying a PhD part-time at James Cook University.
Anh Tuan Truong (VFOSSA)
Talk of 20 minutes
Open Source offers opportunities for collaboration between companies in Vietnam and global enterprises. VFOSSA contributes to a sustainable Open Tech ecosystem involving stakeholders and developer networks in Vietnam and connecting them to the global tech community. During my talk, I will introduce about Vietnam Free and Open Source Software Association (VFOSSA), the FOSS ecosystem in Vietnam and more deeply into one of the newest but most active FOSS project, OpenCPS.
About Anh Tuan Truong:
Start working after being graduated since 1995, I have worked as almost roles in software industry, from software developer, team leader, project manager, product manager to general managers like CTO, CIO and Company president. I love the freedom in free and/or open source software so I spend almost my time on working together with friends and colleagues to develop, promote FOSS and FOSS communities more and more. I am currently member of many FOSS communities, domestic as well as international, generic as well as product specific, such as: HanoiLUG, AsiaSource 2, Zimbra, OTRS, Drupal, Fedora, CentOS linux, etc. I am currently Vietnam Free and Open Source Software Association Vice President.
David Effendi (ChorusText)
Exhibition Area
ChorusText is an open assistive device built with Arduino, Linux SBC and a few sliders and buttons. It is a text-editing device that lets the user do text editing by means of touch and hearing, without eyesight. It is an ongoing project and the goal of the project is to come up with an assistive device that enables the visually challenged to edit text effectively, and with open-source code + design files such that anyone interested can build one themselves.
About David Effendi:
ChorusText is an open assistive device built with Arduino, Linux SBC and a few sliders and buttons. It is a text-editing device that lets the user do text editing by means of touch and hearing, without eyesight. It is an ongoing project and the goal of the project is to come up with an assistive device that enables the visually challenged to edit text effectively, and with open-source code + design files such that anyone interested can build one themselves.
William Hooi (Espert Pte Ltd), Ulrich Norbisrath (ulno.net)
Exhibition Area
Implementing democratised Internet-of-Things services/solutions
About William Hooi:
William Hooi is currently the CEO of Espert Pte Ltd, a new start-up venture that develop Wi-Fi-enabled (ESP8266-based) development and production hardware as well as cloud and mobile SDK to help makers to build their own IoT product, solutions and services. Previously, he was involved in organising the annual Singapore Mini Maker Faire while he was with the Science Centre Singapore. Having served in the public school system in various capacities for the past 15 years, he started his own private practice 2 years ago to create platforms for citizen innovation for the Maker Movement. He is also concurrently the Executive Director of the SG Makers Association and a director of the OneMaker Group, a maker ecosystem developer in Singapore.
About Ulrich Norbisrath:
Ulrich Norbisrath, PhD has more than 20 years of industrial and academic experience in Software Engineering and Systems Integration. He has supported the start-up of several software development companies as well as consulted tech companies in questions of Systems Integration, Mobile, and Cloud Computing. He provides a deep technical understanding of mobile technologies and their integration with cloud services -- both from an academic as well as an industrial perspective. He raised significant grants on Cloud, Mobile, and High Performance Computing at universities in Europe and Central Asia. He is a published book author in the area of Software and Requirements Engineering. Being connected through his immediate family to US Diplomatic services, he is very well traveled and can call on a worldwide network of international experts. He is currently employed as a professor at the University Applied Sciences Upper Austria in their Mobile Computing program.
Praveen (Gnovi) Patil (Department of Physics, G S Science College, Belgaum)
Exhibition Area
PSL@FOSSASIA aims to deliver low-cost lab equipments to millions of students and young scientists and enable them to learn science by experimenting and exploring. The main components of PSL are ExpEYES: Experiments for Young Engineers and Scientists and MicroHope: Micro-controllers for Hobby Projects and Education (www.expeyes.in) In this space open science experiments developed during GSoC-15 project will be exhibited. The demonstrations include Coupled oscillations, Electromagnetic Induction, PSL-Laser Show, Weather station using ExpEYES and Raspberry-Pi and various other science hacks. At this space we will also be presenting and inviting ideas for Science Hack Day India.
About Praveen (Gnovi) Patil:
A Physics Teacher and a free software enthusiast. FOSSASIA GSoC student alumnus and GCI mentor. Working on ExpEYES: Pocket Science Lab, Involved in FOSS training programs for science teachers and students. E-content developer for National Repository of Open Educational Resources (NROER) for School Education and member of committee for “Development of ICT Refresher Course for students and teachers”by Central Institute of Education Technology (CIET), NCERT, New Delhi. Talks at International Events: FOSSASIA - 2014 at Phnom Penh, Cambodia RMLL-2014 at Montpellier, France FOSSASIA -2015 at NUS Singapore PyCon Sg at Singapore
Daniel Pocock (Debian)
Exhibition Area
Free Real-time communications lounge
About Daniel Pocock:
Professional software engineer and consultant. Daniel Pocock has developed enterprise grade solutions for some of the giants of the financial services industry, including secure connectivity for UBS (using Apache Camel), the first customer-facing WebRTC contact solution on Wall Street at Interactive Brokers, enterprise-wide real-time monitoring for Barclays Capital (based on Ganglia) and a wide range of real-time financial trade capture and risk management solutions for Thomson Reuters. Despite the highly proprietary nature of these enterprises, Pocock has remained a champion of efficient, cost effective open source solutions to meet demanding business requirements. Pocock actively contributes to a range of free software projects with a focus on real-time communications (RTC) and VoIP, in particular, Lumicall, JSCommunicator, DruCall, reSIProcate, Ganglia and flactag. Pocock is the author of the RTC Quick Start Guide and is part of the team behind the O'Reilly book Monitoring with Ganglia Pocock is a Debian, Ubuntu and Fedora Developer and an OpenCSW package maintainer. He is a licensed radio amateur with the callsigns VK3TQR and M0GLR.
Level 1, Ground Floor, Scientist For a day, Hall A
Alexandre Lision (Ring developped by Savoir-faire Linux)
Exhibition Area
Ring, a project from Savoir-faire Linux, creators of SFLphone, uses a distributed hash table instead of a central SIP server to find other users. This peer-to-peer network is also accessible from other applications using the project's OpenDHT library. Signaling protocols, like SIP, XMPP and IAX, typically rely on central servers to help users locate each other and initiate sessions. Ring is an evolved version of the SFLphone SIP client adding support for true peer-to-peer calling without any central server. The peer-to-peer network transport is implemented using the OpenDHT library, making it a universal solution that can be used for any arbitrary real-time signalling requirement from any application.
About Alexandre Lision:
Alexandre has been working as a free software consultant at Savoir-faire Linux in Montréal since 2013. He has developped a wide panel of mobile apps, from sport statistics collection, to industrial metal testing. End of 2014, he joined the Ring team to port Ring on Mac OSX, working on low level video development (libav/ffmpeg), packaging, and UI/UX.
Hong Phuc Dang (FOSSASIA)
Exhibition Area
FOSSASIA Exhibition
About Hong Phuc Dang:
Hong Phuc, originally from Vietnam, has lived in the US, Singapore and Berlin. She was a speaker at the Chaos Communication Congress presenting the latest advances in Open Fashion and Technology. She is also the founder of FOSSASIA, the Asia organization bringing together an inspiring community across borders and ages to form a better future with Open Technologies and ICT. Hong Phuc organizes events like the annual FOSSASIA summit since 2009 and puts together Science Hackdays across the region in Vietnam, Dubai and China.
Derek Dai (Wuhan Deepin Technology Co., Ltd.)
Exhibition Area
Deepin Desktop System showcase.
About Derek Dai:
Derek is a Linux user and developer. Interesting in how to measure and improve system performance recently.
Level 1, Ground Floor, Scientist For a day, Hall A
Victoria Bondarchuk (Seoul Tech Society, Dmajor)
Job board in person
If you work on an open source project and need design help with User Experience, Branding or Visual User Interface , come and present your project. Hopefully we can get http://opensourcedesign.net/jobs/ on board and post jobs on the website.
About Victoria Bondarchuk:
UX Researcher from Seoul. Interested in Open Source and Open Fashion.
Ankit - (coala)
Exhibition Area
coala [1] provides an abstraction for static code analysis that is useful while still applicable to any text based language. coala provides convenient user interfaces for multiple usecases which takes away a lot of common tasks from the developer. In this process coala makes research available for production immediately and combines rapid prototyping with instant usability. coala also facilitates people entering the world of open source by providing them valuable feedback on coding standards and formatting in one consistent way for all languages. [1] http://coala-analyzer.org/
About Ankit -:
Ankit has contributed mainly in coala-artwork and helped out in website design for coala. He also did the gitmate.io website. He is also a GNOME foundation member. Udayan who will also be helping with the stall has been involved with coala since February 2015. He may also be giving a talk at FOSSASIA if selected. coala was his GSoC project where he worked on core coala features and developing a GUI for it. Since then he has been involved with coala in some capacity.
Harish Pillay (RedHat)
Exhibition Area
RedHat Community - Helping our open source projects and standards be wildly successful
About Harish Pillay:
Harish Pillay is the president of the Internet Society Singapore Chapter. He is a pioneer on the Internet having gotten on to the ARPAnet and UUCP networks in 1985. He is a ham and his callsign is 9V1HP.
Ricky Setyawan (MySQL)
Exhibition Area
The World's Most Popular Open Source Database
About Ricky Setyawan:
Ricky Setyawan has been in the IT industry for 17 years with the good last 15 years working as RDBMS specialist. He is currently MySQL Principal Sales Consultant for Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei and Pakistan. Prior to joining Oracle, he was a Principal DBA doing database design and management on Oracle and DB2 on RedHat Linux on continuous availability server. He has been working on a number of RDBMS throughout his career such as Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, and MySQL.
Misako Ito (UNESCO)
Exhibition Area
The YouthMobile Initiative builds on the experience of many worldwide initiatives that introduce young people to computer science programming (learning-to-code) and problem solving (coding-to-learn). It also seeks to build on experiences targeting young women who are vastly underrepresented in this field. Finally it builds on the consideration that for millions of young people, the smartphone in their pocket is a very powerful computer, it will be their only computer, and they use it for nearly every aspect of their lives: communicating, learning, taking pictures, and playing games.
About Misako Ito:
WHO BENEFITS FROM YOUTHMOBILE? »Youth and Youth organizations Informal learning opportunities for youth to engage in society and earn livelihoods as mobile app entrepreneurs. ICT-enabled youth organizations creating a sustainable pool of trainers, support staff, and mentors. »Secondary School Students Acquiring high-level 21st century skills and confidence to develop/promote mobile apps to resolve local issues of sustainable development. »Teachers and Principals Teaching a new, innovative course in mobile apps development, acquiring ICT-pedagogy skills, connecting the school to other schools nationally and globally. » By gathering training materials to teach young people to develop mobile apps. The materials will be high-level and open-licensed for translation, localization, and innovations. Training materials will be pedagogically accurate for accreditation and employer recognition. » By training teachers to teach the students. UNESCO will be identifying all schools worldwide with existing programs for advanced computer studies. » By linking the learners to mobile app competitions, through the creation of the first global list of app competitors: encouraging trained students to submit apps for prizes, recognition, and employment opportunities; and let them meet and learn from those who made it.
Elda Webb (OneMakerGroup)
Exhibition Area
Innovation depends on developing creative solutions for the complicated challenges we will be facing in the future, but what happens if we want to start innovating but we believe that we are not creative? The experiential booth will have tools and materials for participants to stop by and create a personalized coaster or greeting. Each participant can stay up to 20 min, as to let other people have a chance at making.
About Elda Webb:
I have a very curious mind and I strive to integrate design, technology and learning in all my endeavors. I’m currently the Lead Curriculum Developer for OneMaker Group and my main objective is to help makers of all ages build up their creative confidence by breaking the barriers of the mind, and show that everybody have the potential to be a maker and a designer. Before joining OMG, I worked at Autodesk for over 9 years in Singapore as a Learning Content Developer. I hold a B.A in Architecture from the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education and has worked as a 3D modeler and Graphic Designer in Mexico, USA and Canada. She is actively involved in the Singapore Maker community.
Peter LIM (Nanyang Polytechnic)
Exhibition Area
The exhibition showcases the use of open source hardware and software e.g. Intel Galileo, Arduino etc to support student learning needs, for student exposure to open source tools and as outreach to potential students
About Peter LIM:
Open source software and hardware kit has enabled solutions to be developed rapidly. To enhance student learning experience, students having been taught on fundamental concepts and knowledge, use open source hardware and software to reinforce the understanding through the application development. Students have benefited from the methods greatly.
Level 1, Ground Floor, Scientist For a day, Hall A
Claire Tan (NTU Nanyang Technopreneruship Center)
Exhibition Area
The Master of Science in Technopreneurship and Innovation (MSc TIP) programme is a 1-year full-time programme or 2-year part-time programme. It is also offered in Chinese language as a 1-year full-time programme.
About Claire Tan:
The Master of Science in Technopreneurship and Innovation (MSc TIP) programme aims to develop and equip global entrepreneurs with the skills and stamina to turn novel ideas into successful ventures in the fast-paced economy today. Modelled after the venture creation cycle, this programme enables candidates to develop an entrepreneurial mindset and the essential business knowledge. Participants learn effective entrepreneurship problem-solving techniques and business decision making approaches through the unique TIP pedagogy: Experiential Learning, Global Immersion and Transformational Experience. Imparting managerial theories and technical skills, the distinguished faculty members and business mentors inspire the participants with their strong domain expertise and hands-on approaches. Further to that, the programme fosters a global entrepreneurship learning ecosystem which includes visit to leading technology hotbeds such as Silicon Valley, Boston, New York City, Beijing Zhongguanzun Science Park and Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology (SIAT), and learning exchange at world-class universities such as Stanford, Berkley, Tsinghua, and Peking University.
Stephanie Taylor (Google)
Talk of 20 minutes
provide later
About Stephanie Taylor:
Stephanie is the program manager of the open source team at Google. She manages Google Summer of Code Program as well as the recently launched Google Code-in, a global contest introducing teenagers to open source software development. Stephanie hosts open source events at Google.
Stephan Wissel (IBM Singapore)
Talk of 20 minutes
Observe - Reflect - Make' is the mantra for software success. Getting software requirement and intends right is a complex challenge. One approach to tackle the complexity is the discipline called 'Design Thinking' as promoted by IBM. The talk will introduce into 'Design Thinking', what it is, how it works, how it helps to create better software. Where does it fit into the greater scheme of things and how can it be adopted in your development.
About Stephan Wissel:
Stephan is a veteran of the software industry, best known for his expertise in IBM Collaboration solutions. He mentors developers of all shades: open source, startups and corporate and is a frequent speaker on technical events. He covers all levels of expertise, from novice introductions to technical deep dives. Despite being German his talks are rated entertaining.
Francis Bond (Nanyang Technological University)
Talk of 20 minutes
How a combination of technical and social engineering has led to a multi-million lexical database, accessible for all. It has over two million words in 150 languages, organized into concepts and linked in a semantic network. The data is downloadable and available as linked open data. Every year we add tens of thousands of new senses (concept-word pairs), and richer links between them. We will talk about how we organize the data, how we freed it and the Python API for accessing it.
About Francis Bond:
Francis Bond is an Associate Professor at the Division of Linguistics and Multilingual Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.He worked on machine translation and natural language understanding in Japan, first at Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation and then at the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology in Japan, where his focus was on open source natural language processing. He is an active member of the Deep Linguistic Processing with HPSG Initiative (DELPH-IN) and the Global WordNet Association. His main research interest is in natural language understanding. Francis has developed and released wordnets for Chinese, Japanese, Malay and Indonesian and coordinates the open multilingual wordnet. He is a member of the Internationalization Program of the Internet Architecture Board.
Michael Christen (YaCy.net)
Talk of 20 minutes
Self-made twitter, Internet of Things and large-scale social graph for everyone
About Michael Christen:
I made YaCy and loklak
Elizabeth Joseph (Hewlett Packard Enterprise)
Talk of 20 minutes
Using only open source tools, the OpenStack Infrastructure team operates a code review driven infrastructure for the OpenStack project. This talk will highlight the tooling used to accomplish this and how using code review and testing in our DevOps work has made us a more effective team.
About Elizabeth Joseph:
Elizabeth K. Joseph is a Systems Administrator at HPE working on the OpenStack Infrastructure team which runs the fully open source infrastructure built for OpenStack development. She also does work in the Ubuntu community and is the co-author of the 8th edition of The Official Ubuntu Book.
Lunch boxes are provided at the exhibition hall A (Scientiest for a Day area) and at a number of tracks. Please use your voucher, that you got at the registration in the morning to get your box.
Lightning talks are designed to be short presentations between five to ten minutes long, but are usually capped at five minutes. Most conferences will allot a segment of roughly 30 to 90 minutes long to speakers. Talks are arranged one after the other during the sessions. The talks are usually given at conferences in order for the event to have many speakers discuss a multitude of topics. The conferences are held in order for individuals to be able to share their ideas and concepts to people who have experience in the specific field. Lightning talks are brief which requires the speaker to make his or her point clearly and rid the presentation of non-critical information. This causes the audience to be more attentive to the speaker and gain a broader array of knowledge from the presentations given.
Sarvesh Ranjan (Cisco)
Lightning Talk
Anomaly detection is very important problem and extensive research has been done about it’s various applications and domains. In this report I’ve documented my research on anomaly detection in cloud computing architectures like OpenStack, Microsoft Azure & Amazon Web Services(AWS). Cloud computing systems create a big jungle of Logs and Metrics and these can provide a cloud operator tremendous insight into the systems and answer the most important questions about architecture’s health. My research shows that cloud computing architectures face completely different types of anomalies than discussed in other domains and these metrics are not very useful if used in single dimension but if we perform anomaly detection on multiple dimensions together and correlate thus generated insights with Logs we can increase our efficiency and decrease false positive cases by a huge margin. When dealing with this amount of logs and metrics we need to come up with novel distributed architectures. In this research I’ve focused on multiple dimensional anomaly detection on storm like distributed system using locality sensitive hashing and sequence mining. I hope that this research will provide us with a better understanding of different directions in which research and implementations have been done on the domain of anomaly detection, and how techniques which are proposed and implemented for a domain can be applied in different domains for which it was not initially intended to begin with.
About Sarvesh Ranjan:
OpenStack
Mayank Sharma (OpenMRS)
Lightning Talk
A quick introduction on how developers can set up an OAuth2 Authorization Server and start managing/monitoring the interactions of third party applications with their system/API's. Spring Security makes it really easy to protect endpoints, authorize requests and implement RBAC. The talk will quickly run through the different aspects of Spring Security and OAuth2 and how to customize your Authorization Server
About Mayank Sharma:
Mayank is the Manager of Developer Tools for OpenMRS. He also worked as the Release Manager for OpenMRS Platform 2.0. He's a two time GSoC student and an avid FOSS contributor. He likes to travel, do hackathons and work on cool tech.
Level 3, Dalton Hall
Dong Ma (Hewlett Packard Enterprise )
Lightning Talk
This talk aims to introduce the Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery workflow for the Open Source projects FOSSology and OpenStack. Attendees will learn about the benefits of CI/CD and also how CI/CD works through problems faced on these two projects. They will learn to leverage the Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery workflow into their Open Source and Free Software development. * Introduction * What's CI/CD * Why important for Open Source and Free Software development * Typical Workflow * Use FOSSology project as example to introduce the typical workflow and tools * Problems: typical workflow don't scale to large open source projects * OpenStack Workflow * OpenStack workflow and tools * OpenStack infrastructure * Problems solved * How to leverage the OpenStack way
About Dong Ma:
Dong Ma (Vincent) has worked at Hewlett Packard (now Hewlett Packard Enterprise) since 2007. He worked on the FOSSology project from 2009, with a focus on the CI/CD system. He now works on the OpenStack infrastructure project, focusing on Jenkins and openstackci.
Garvit Khatri (KDE)
Lightning Talk
The talk will be started with a brief introduction about KDE and Labplot. Following that I will demonstrate the final result of integration between LabPlot and Cantor. I will demonstrate with the help of few python and maxima scripts what a user can do using the LabPlot. I will also give a brief about what will be its future, how this functionality will eventually help users and how can others start contributing to the code. I will then put some light on the other two projects. Firstly, Ming Ngo added visualization of 3D-data to LabPlot using the powerful VTK library. This helped data to be visualized as points in 3D-space, curves and surfaces. Another project by Ankit Wagarde, he added a very useful tool to LabPlot that allows users to extract data from images. After importing of an image and setting the reference points, the user starts to select the data points on the image that get automatically converted into numbers.
About Garvit Khatri:
* Presently KDE contributor and working as a freelancer Web Developer for various startups for past 3 years * GSOC Student 2015 with KDE, worked on integration of LabPlot with Cantor. * Season of KDE 2014 Student, worked on porting KNetwalk to KF5. My Contribution: I was selected as Google Summer Code 2015 Student for KDE Org. I worked on the project LabPlot, where I integrated another application Cantor[1] into LabPlot[2]. LabPlot is a scientific data plotter application while Cantor is a front-end to powerful mathematics and statistics package. Data sources in LabPlot originate from a spreadsheet where the user types in the data by hand or import the data from an external ASCII-file to a spreadsheet. So, I integrated the worksheet capability of Cantors and extensibility to work on various back-ends such as Maxima, Octave, Python 2 and 3, R, Sage etc. to LabPlot. Now user can use those back-ends to create a worksheet inside of LabPlot and then export data from these worksheets to Plot and do a lot more with graphs than what Cantor offered before. Refer to my blog[1] for a detailed example. I have also been associated with KDE before GSOC 2015, I contributed in porting various KDE Applications to new KDE Frameworks 5 including LabPlot. [1]: https://edu.kde.org/cantor/ [2]: https://edu.kde.org/applications/science/labplot/ [3]: http://garvitdelhi.blogspot.in/2015/08/final-evaluation.html
Damini Satya Kammakomati (Kony, Inc.)
Lightning Talk
FarmMind Technologies ==================== 1 PROBLEM STATEMENT ---------------------------------------------- This smart centralized system will help farmers to take a step into precision agriculture being monitored by wireless sensors in and around their farms. This covers problems like irrigation management, crop maintenance, soil fertility maintenance, crop yield improvement, pesticide management in compliance with good agricultural practices. 2 WORK FLOW ---------------------------- The innovation focuses on developing a smart centralized system to control different requirements for a farm per crop being grown. An IoT based system integrates the cloud AI services with that of the hardware and sensors in the farms / fields which constantly stream real-time information to the servers. Depending on various other parameters like humidity, temperature and other meteorological data, predictions of the requirements of the farm is calculated and the hardware device which automatically opens the valves for irrigation / warns the farmer about doing a scheduled check in the localized language is made via SMS. This provides a centralized GIS collection of the soil data allowing extensive research and work by the agricultural scientists to guide the farmers in a given area for the crop they're growing. Simultaneously it provides the data for governments to optimize on the water irrigation routes / canals so that other drought struck areas can ensure water in times of need. The hardware solution consists of various sensors connected to the GSM chip module on board which allows the farmers to irrigate the farms when needed or transmit data to the required scientists/soil experts in the area who could help. • It keeps updating the data base on parameters such as soil temperature, humidity, air temperature, determine frost and heat events, forecast harvest time. • It maps the fields from phone using GPS and input field sampling information. • This systems aims for mobile first and cloud first implementation. • It integrates pest management system by observing, inspecting, and identifying certain trends in the pests and pesticides. It keeps the track record. • Last but not the least, it proposes high yielding plans and best crop management plans even under disasters. 3 FIELDS ARE THE NEW OFFICES AND DATA IS DRIVING THE TRACTORS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We are trying to use the emerging Cloud based technologies in AI, machine learning and big data to solve important problems as well as to get the problem notified to the related person in real time. This system allows farmers to monitor and maintain the quality of their farms by sitting at their home just using simple services like SMS in case there is no internet connectivity present in the area or by using the app built for android phones. The hardware is also sending data of the farm to the agricultural scientists who can use it to make data driven decisions. Integrations with the other meteorological information helps to offer the best advice for irrigation. This system can also be used to inform the farmers in a particular area in case of an agricultural outbreak risk in that area. The other solutions include animal breeding and maintaining the data informing the farmers about the required medication needed for the cattle. Mainly focuses on reliable, safety, interoperable, low cost implementation.
About Damini Satya Kammakomati:
I'm a senior undergraduate from BVRIT Hyderabad, also interning at Kony labs.I'm a tech savvy who always believe in developing products for the people rather than developing which I can.
Eugene Teo (OpenTech)
Lightning Talk
Talk about PyData Singapore meetups
About Eugene Teo:
Eugene Teo is the organiser of PyData Singapore.
Rajat Ujawane (National Institute of Technology Warangal)
Lightning Talk
Real time tracking systems are expensive and difficult to maintain, at the same time they take a lot of network resources like 4G/3G/2G data for the mapping to a real world location. In developing countries like India where the internet is still expensive. This is exactly where our IoT platform steps in, with a mission to build a scalable and extensible real time tracking system. We would be having a small IoT device installed in your vehicle which would able to transfer data back and forth to the server. It will help in tracking different vehicles in real time. It would be scalable to any possible vehicle runs on the road. For example, Truck owner would able to track his Trucks travelling in different part of the country, it will give him power to not only track his vehicles but also notifies him during vehicle accident. This technology is the future of the Shipping Industry, Land-Cargo Industry and also for personal use for tracking your vehicle or in the case of car-theft.
About Rajat Ujawane:
I am an undergraduate student of National Institute of Technology Warangal, majoring in Computer Science. I am passionate about computers, technologies, open source and love to work on Projects which make a difference in people’s day to day life and make it easier and I am glad, I had worked on a project during my undergraduate which impacts half a million of people’s life everyday. These things apart I love watching cartoons, travelling and eating good food.
Faris Muhamad Ali Fadloli (CryoWerx)
Lightning Talk
ExpressJS is one of the best NodeJS web application framework that provides a robust set of features for web and mobile applications. Lots of NodeJS developer use it as their main web application framework. They have their own coding-style for the application route and also its middleware. Now, imagine if there are several backend engineers, developing a big web application and they never write any code documentation, only in several function/method. If there's a new engineer join the development, he/she has been given tasks by their lead engineer to enhance several endpoints and they don't know the flow of the endpoint. Hence, it will consume more time for new engineer to read other engineers code. That's why PipaJS come to the rescue. PipaJS is a module for ExpressJS which will help developers to understand the flow of each route by just reading the route and its middleware flow.
About Faris Muhamad Ali Fadloli:
Faris is a polyglot full-stack (and mobile) developer who have won several Hackaton in Indonesia. He is also a foodie and an amateur food-photographer.
Level 3, Dalton Hall
Kranthi Kiran Guduru (Thinkbroad)
Lightning Talk
Tracking fuel level in a gas cylinder is still an unexplored area where age old practices are followed to measure and track in developing countries like India, China, Pakistan, Bangladesh and many more. Gas-o-Gauge is an IoT based application which uses a Load sensor and a GPRS module in an embedded system to track and poll level of fuel to a server on cloud. It enables users and vendors to track and decide gas cylinder stock in a smart way. With the increasing interconnection between people’s lives and the devices that they interact with in their daily lives, this IoT device is a scalable platform that allows users to integrate their daily kitchen needs and consumption to provide real time data for business intelligence to gas agencies and vendors as well as integrate daily requirements like ordering groceries, recipe trackers, restaurants listing during a low gas level as well as instructions and resources to drive/ride to the location. This prototype has been the runner up at the Indian School of Business, engineering design awards. Link for Opensource Repository: https://github.com/kranthikiran01/Gas-o-Gauge.git
About Kranthi Kiran Guduru:
Open source enthusiast with interests in fields of Business intelligence, data science, ML and IoT
Kukuh Syafaat (BlankOn Project)
Lightning Talk
This talk tells about how to contribute F/OSS project with Inkscape (icons, splash, wallpaper and other artwork stuff)
About Kukuh Syafaat:
GNU/Linux Enthusiast, UI/UX Designer, F/OSS Contributor
Level 3, Dalton Hall
Sudheesh Singanamalla (Loklak / National Institute of Technology Warangal)
Lightning Talk
I was a GSoC 2015 Student with FOSSASIA working on the distributed tweet search server and scraper Loklak. In this talk i'd be talking about the architecture, the functionality and the features that loklak offers in comparison to the twitter API, At the same time I'd also be talking about the p2p functionality and the ability for building applications centered around the tweets obtained from twitter, specifically for customer services. At the same time i'd also be talking about the timeline search and navigation system in loklak.net and how the features offered in them would be game changers to the way conferences are held and allowing users to share maps.
About Sudheesh Singanamalla:
I am an open source enthusiast and contribute to FOSSASIA, Loklak, Yacy, PSF, Mozilla and Fedora actively. I've been an intern with Microsoft and Redhat in the past and was a GSoC 2015 Student with fossasia and a mentor in GCI 2015.
Trilok Tourani (sTeam)
Lightning Talk
The talk will explain all about the project that I have done in the summer based on the enhancement of command line tools for sTeam collaboration platform and aware the people about the open source programming language called Pike. This will take the audience through the advantages/disadvantages to pick up this language as well as what difficulties(technical) I faced while learning this in a short time. This talk will also target the functioning of sTeam and how these "enhancements" were done (code wise) and the strategies applied to get it to work. Lastly, it will also encourage students to take up GSoC and Google code-in to boost their knowledge domain and be a part of the open source community.
About Trilok Tourani:
Trilok is a software developer and a tech enthusiast who loves to solve problems and keep learning something new every day. Trilok is fascinated by the security, and machine learning domains and is currently trying to build something with the knowledge in the same. Trilok is currently pursuing his Bachelors in Computer science and engineering at PES Institute of Technology in Bangalore and is looking for more and more opportunities to build tools for the open source community.
Arushi Vashist (International Institute Of Information Technology, Hyderabad, India)
Outreachy
I will be talking about Outreachy: overview, participation, details about the program, organisations that take part and end with discussion on my own project with HOT (Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team).
About Arushi Vashist:
Outreachy is one program that motivates a number of female coders around the world to contribute to Open Source. I would love to see more participation in the upcoming years and therefore want to spread awareness about it.
Saif Niazi (Data Scientist)
Lightning Talk
Many problems of recent interest in the banks are detection of fraud analysis as well as insurance analysis that can be put in the framework of convex optimization. Due to the explosion in size and complexity of modern datasets, it is increasingly important to be able to solve problems with a very large number of fea- tures or training examples. As a result, both the decentralized collection or storage of these datasets as well as accompanying distributed solution methods are either necessary or at least highly desirable. H2O makes it possible for anyone to easily apply math and predictive analytics to solve today’s most challenging business problems. Combine the power of highly advanced algorithms, the freedom of open source, and the capacity of truly scalable in-memory processing for big data on one or many nodes. These capabilities make it faster, easier, and more cost effective to harness big data to maximum benefit for the business. Some Key features of using H2O are Easy-to-use WebUI and Familiar Interfaces – Set up and get started quickly using either H2O’s intuitive Web-based user interface or familiar programming environ- ments like R, Java, Scala, Python, JSON, and through our powerful APIs. Massively Scalable Big Data Analysis – Train a model on complete data sets, not just small samples, and iterate and develop models in real-time with H2O’s rapid in-memory distributed parallel processing. Real-time Data Scoring – Use the Nanofast Scoring Engine to score data against models for accurate predictions in just nanoseconds in any environment. Enjoy 10X faster scoring.
About Saif Niazi:
Saif Niazi is a data analyst in Barclays. Interest also include Hadoop, Big data, statistics and data mining.
Jigyasa Grover (Women Who Code)
Lightning Talk
My journey in FOSS with Pharo & FOSSASIA aims to walk through the speaker's involvement in Open Source especially FOSSASIA with programs like Google Summer of Code and Google Code-in and the Pharo Community. The session will have a special emphasis on describing the not widely known but a powerful environment of Pharo. Attendees shall get to know more about Pharo/Smalltalk, its projects and how to kick-start contributing to it apart from the vast range of opportunities available in the world of open source ranging from coding to documentation, training, outreach and research. The session aims to inspire budding open source developers.
About Jigyasa Grover:
An enthusiastic Open Source crusader, I am a feminist by heart. Helping bridge the gender gap in the technology world, I have been involved with global communities as the Director of Women Who Code Delhi Network, Leading Google Women Techmakers Delhi chapter and also mentoring and organizing Learn IT, Girl ! . Pursuing Bachelor of Technology in Computer Science and Engineering from Delhi Technological University INDIA, I have successfully completed Google Summer of Code 2015 and have also mentored pre-university students step into the world of open-source development via Google Code-In under FOSSASIA. I have been recognized as one of the contributors in Pharo 4.0 IDE released in April 2015 and has also authored tutorials published in the official documentations of Pharo. I have also been contributing to many Open Source Projects in Pharo/Smalltalk, Android and Python and have also won hackathons and app development challenges. I am also involved with tech societies like The Institute of Engineering and Technology (IET) and Google Developers Group New Delhi.
Kushan Kushan Joshi (DA-IICT)
Lightning Talk
JSPM is the javascript package manager from future. It natively supports the new ES2015 module loader. When compared to other package managers like Browserify and Webpack, JSPM shines by supporting all the existing module loading configuration like commonJS, AMD, ES2015. It also allows to bundle the package for production, hence doing away with grunt, gulp or any other task runner. Under the hood it is powered by SystemJS to load the packages. Inside, it is nothing but a polyfill for the proposed ES2015 module loader, to make good use of the future javascript today. JSPM is going to be at the forefront of package/dependency management in the long run as hacks like minification and bundling soon become unnecessary in an attempt to make our web applications faster.
About Kushan Kushan Joshi:
I was working as a remote full stack developer at Playpower Labs, during my 5th semester of college. https://lyearnreact.herokuapp.com I am an active contributor to OpenStreetMaps, JSCS, Electron, Cesium and Firefox. https://github.com/kepta | https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/user_profile?login=0o3ko0%40gmail.com My atom plugin has got 58 stars on github. https://github.com/kepta/atom-css-to-inline I created my college’s lecture portal. https://daintranet.com | https://github.com/kepta/daintranet I am currently in top 1% of India leaderboard at hacker rank. http://hackerrank.com/kepta Created my college’s annual festival website
Phuc Pham (Gcall Pte.Ltd)
Lightning Talk
Spatial data mining is the process of discovering interesting, useful, non-trivial patterns from large spatial datasets. A growing attention has been paid to spatial data mining and knowledge discovery (SDMKD). This paper presents the principles of SDMKD, proposes three new techniques, and gives their applicability and examples. First, the motivation of SDMKD is briefed. Second, the intension and extension of SDMKD concept are presented. Third, three new techniques are proposed in this section, i.e. SDMKD-based image classification that integrates spatial inductive learning from GIS database and Bayesian classification, cloud model that integrates randomness and fuzziness, data field that radiate the energy of observed data to the universe discourse. Fourth, applicability and examples are studied on three cases. The first is remote sensing classification, the second is landslide-monitoring data mining, and the third is uncertain reasoning. Finally, the whole paper is concluded and discussed.
About Phuc Pham:
Spatial analysis or spatial statistics includes any of the formal techniques which study entities using their topological, geometric, or geographic properties. Spatial analysis includes a variety of techniques, many still in their early development, using different analytic approaches and applied in fields as diverse as astronomy, with its studies of the placement of galaxies in the cosmos, to chip fabrication engineering, with its use of "place and route" algorithms to build complex wiring structures. In a more restricted sense, spatial analysis is the technique applied to structures at the human scale, most notably in the analysis of geographic data. Complex issues arise in spatial analysis, many of which are neither clearly defined nor completely resolved, but form the basis for current research. The most fundamental of these is the problem of defining the spatial location of the entities being studied. Classification of the techniques of spatial analysis is difficult because of the large number of different fields of research involved, the different fundamental approaches which can be chosen, and the many forms the data can take.
Colin Charles (MariaDB Corporation)
Keynote
New MariaDB major release is out of the door. It has new unique features (at rest encryption of the database, integrated Galera Cluster, GIS enhancements), performance enhancements (optimistic parallel replication, max statement timeouts, dump thread enhancements in replication), as well as better MySQL compatibility (temporal literals like 5.6). This talk will go over everything new that MariaDB 10.1 has to offer. It will describe all new features, both MySQL compatible, and MariaDB-only ones and show usage examples and practical use cases.
About Colin Charles:
Colin Charles works on the MariaDB Server at MariaDB Corporation. He has been the Chief Evangelist for MariaDB since 2009, with work ranging from speaking engagements to consultancy and engineering works around MariaDB. He lives in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and had worked at MySQL since 2005, and been a MySQL user since 2000. Before joining MySQL, he worked actively on the Fedora and OpenOffice.org projects. He's well known within open source communities in APAC, and has spoken at many conferences to boot.
Tim Oxley (CampJS)
Talk of 20 minutes
The Node.JS & npm ecosystem is oft praised for it's "culture of extreme modularity", which has led to the proliferation of hundreds of thousands packages on npm. How do modular patterns translate into the construction of evolving, real-world applications? Many functional programming learning resources will teach you to write functional code, but it's often highly indirect, deeply abstracted, requires understanding complex relationships between custom library calls, and doesn't represent the reality of how people actually write JavaScript. The goal of this workshop is to create realistic problems that can be solved using terse, vanilla, idiomatic JavaScript.
About Tim Oxley:
Tim Oxley is an an Australian JavaScript developer living in Singapore working with NodeSource. Tim is a co-host of the NodeUp podcast, author of NodeSchool's functional JavaScript workshop, founder of the CampJS conference, founder of the SingaporeJS meetup and an avid open-source contributor.
Carter Emmart (Astrovisualization at the American Museum of Natural History)
40 minutes (20 minute demonstration, 20 minute talk)
After a demonstration of OpenSpace's visualisation of New Horizons' encounter with Pluto last year, Carter and his technical team will describe the OpenSpace system in some detail.
About Carter Emmart:
Carter uses astronomy and computational modelling to create scientifically accurate, three-dimensional tours of our universe.
Saptarshi Purkayastha (OpenMRS)
Talk of 20 minutes
The OpenMRS platform and core modules are worked on by a central team of contributors who design and release these features through coordinated communication. But there are over 200 publicly available modules that have been developed to work on OpenMRS by over 500 different developers/organizations who maintain it without much coordination between themselves. There are modules that have moved between maintainers. Implementations of EHR systems have customized, release forks of modules in the true spirit of a bazaar model. There are over 25 projects that started in the OpenMRS community but have become their own companies, platforms, distributions that are used by implementers in over 50 countries. This fragmented community allows for freedom, but wastes resources, creates difficulties for new implementers and results in friction and dissatisfaction in the community. As central OpenMRS leadership, we have planned a certification process that will allow better management and governance of the community, but still improving the freedom of contributors to fork and establish smaller, specialized communities of practice. The talk summarizes the historical divergence due to forks and communities of practice, by showing evolution of the community over last 10yrs. Later in the talk I discuss how the certification process brings visibility, coordination and accessibility to new members of the community.
About Saptarshi Purkayastha:
Saptarshi Purkayastha is a core developer for DHIS 2 and OpenMRS, both large communities developing health information systems. As a researcher, he has implemented health information systems in developing countries and has consulted the WHO in South Asia region. He is a visiting assistant professor in health informatics at Indiana University-Purdue University in Indianapolis, USA . Previously worked as a research fellow at the University of Oslo, Norway. He has industry experience in financial systems, but has moved to healthcare since last 8 years.
Rafal Kowalski, Manan Wason (Open Event)
Talk of 20 minutes
Are you wondering how to create an app which allow us to manage all conferences events? Open Event consist of three components(web, android and server). I will explain how I developed an Open event orga server project, which framework and language I used. Easly running your Orga Server by your own on local enviroment using Vagrant.
About Rafal Kowalski, Manan Wason:
Open Event Project aims to make events, conferences to easily create an Android and Web App. Therefor It consist of three components(web, android and server). Database stores a lot of details about events for example speakers, tracks and sessions. Open Orga server is responsible for managing data in admin panel and providing a detailed events data to Android and Web App via API.
Daniel Pocock (Debian)
Talk of 20 minutes
At FOSDEM 2013, leading developers of free real-time communications software dared to get up on stage and ask the question "Can we replace Skype, Viber, Twitter and Facebook?". Was this the right question and how does it relate to free software development today and in the future? Pocock talks about what has changed since then and where things are going in this domain in the year ahead, especially with the emergence of WebRTC and the ubiquity of browsers that support it and the opportunities this has created for the world of web development and interaction with other open systems. Can you imagine a world where phone communication works with all the benefits of email (but without spam)? Per-minute charges eliminated, flexibility for developers to customize the experience with standard scripting languages like Python or JavaScript and organizations of any size able to assert their identity and brand securely using SIP and XMPP addresses? Is this a worthwhile vision? What do each of us - developers, sysadmins and end users - need to do to make it happen? What will be the alternative outcome - for both society in general and fans of free technology in particular - if we stand back and allow proprietary solutions to run rampant? This session will survey some of the free software solutions that exist today and ways you can participate in their improvement and deployment to help realize this vision.
About Daniel Pocock:
Professional software engineer and consultant. Daniel Pocock has developed enterprise grade solutions for some of the giants of the financial services industry, including secure connectivity for UBS (using Apache Camel), the first customer-facing WebRTC contact solution on Wall Street at Interactive Brokers, enterprise-wide real-time monitoring for Barclays Capital (based on Ganglia) and a wide range of real-time financial trade capture and risk management solutions for Thomson Reuters. Despite the highly proprietary nature of these enterprises, Pocock has remained a champion of efficient, cost effective open source solutions to meet demanding business requirements. Pocock actively contributes to a range of free software projects with a focus on real-time communications (RTC) and VoIP, in particular, Lumicall, JSCommunicator, DruCall, reSIProcate, Ganglia and flactag. Pocock is the author of the RTC Quick Start Guide and is part of the team behind the O'Reilly book Monitoring with Ganglia Pocock is a Debian, Ubuntu and Fedora Developer and an OpenCSW package maintainer. He is a licensed radio amateur with the callsigns VK3TQR and M0GLR.
Martin Andrews (Red Cat Labs)
Workshop of 2 hours
Deep Learning is a hot topic, but has a steep initial learning curve. To ease the pain, the second part of this workshop will *require* participants to have VirtualBox installed on their laptops. The workshop will start from the very basics (with a little mathematics), and quickly progress to getting hands-on with open source software including the training of a deep network on simple problems. This will be followed by a more in-depth portion : Using a pre-built VM, participants will experiment with a much larger pre-trained model, and get an understanding of application to both e-commerce and generative art.
About Martin Andrews:
Martin has a PhD in Machine Learning, and has been an Open Source developer since 1999. After a career in finance, he decided to follow his original passion, and now works on Machine Learning / Artificial Intelligence full-time. Previous presentations can be found at: http://redcatlabs.com/presentations
Lunch boxes are provided at the exhibition hall A (Scientiest for a Day area) and at a number of tracks. Please use your voucher, that you got at the registration in the morning to get your box.
Ishan Khanna (Mifos Initiative)
Workshop of 1 hour
As developers these days follow agile processes and hence want automation of repetitive tasks. This is an opportunity for them to leverage the power of IntelliJ IDEA SDK to build plugins for IntelliJ Idea and Android Studio in Java. This will be a hands on training session in which developers will : -> setup the dev environment for plugin development -> get an overview of plugin architecture, manifests etc. -> Write a couple of plugins and will be able to deploy them on their IDEs.
About Ishan Khanna:
I am a passionate product enthusiast and self-taught developer who loves open source technologies, tech conferences, and hackathons. I successfully graduated as a Google Summer of Code Intern in 2014 under Mifos and in 2015 under XMPP Standards Foundation. I manage the source code for the Android Client Project at Mifos as an open source contributor. Previously - -> I conducted this workshop at Droidcon'15 in Bangalore, India held on 17-18 December, 2015 -> I have spoken at Global Mifos Summit in Sharjah, U.A.E (March, 2015) on “Mifos Android Client - Architecture, and how to leverage the app to develop features for your organisation (Mifos Partners).” -> I have given two talks (2014) at Jamia Milia Islamia and Jaypee Institute of Information Technology on “How to use open source android libraries to increase productivity while developing android apps.” -> I gave a Talk at Delhi Technological University (January, 2015) on “How to get into Google Summer of Code”
Mike Anderson (Datacraft)
Workshop of 1 hour
Functional programming provides a powerful set of tools for procedural generation of content for games, art and product design. In this workshop we will explore the use of the Clojure programming language to create a wide range of visual effects, from game textures to procedurally generated animations.
About Mike Anderson:
Mike is a data scientist, technology consultant and open source enthusiast. Formally a strategy consultant at McKinsey&Co., he now runs Datacraft, a Singapore-based startup focused on data science and machine learning. Mike is a prolific open source contributor under the tag "mikera", focusing mainly on Java and Clojure libraries for data science and art.
Ulrich Norbisrath (ulno.net), William Hooi (Espert Pte Ltd)
Workshop of 2.5 hours
In this class, we are imagining that we have to build a new and fun product for our imaginary customer. It is supposed to be a gamification of the existing product. So we will learn how to attach an Espresso Lite board to an existing thing and turn it into an input or an output. We will show you how to network these things with each other, with a computer application (most likely a computer game), and your phone. Bring some random not too valuable things (from your used coke can to some dollar store items) which you are not too sad about if they might get altered in a way that they might be not useful for unknown people anymore. We will provide aluminum foil, card stock, scissors, and glue for your alterations. Besides this bring a laptop, your team spirit, and lots of creativity.
About Ulrich Norbisrath:
Ulrich Norbisrath, PhD has more than 20 years of industrial and academic experience in Software Engineering and Systems Integration. He has supported the start-up of several software development companies as well as consulted tech companies in questions of Systems Integration, Mobile, and Cloud Computing. He provides a deep technical understanding of mobile technologies and their integration with cloud services -- both from an academic as well as an industrial perspective. He raised significant grants on Cloud, Mobile, and High Performance Computing at universities in Europe and Central Asia. He is a published book author in the area of Software and Requirements Engineering. Being connected through his immediate family to US Diplomatic services, he is very well traveled and can call on a worldwide network of international experts. He is currently employed as a professor at the University Applied Sciences Upper Austria in their Mobile Computing program.
About William Hooi:
William Hooi is currently the CEO of Espert Pte Ltd, a new start-up venture that develop Wi-Fi-enabled (ESP8266-based) development and production hardware as well as cloud and mobile SDK to help makers to build their own IoT product, solutions and services. Previously, he was involved in organising the annual Singapore Mini Maker Faire while he was with the Science Centre Singapore. Having served in the public school system in various capacities for the past 15 years, he started his own private practice 2 years ago to create platforms for citizen innovation for the Maker Movement. He is also concurrently the Executive Director of the SG Makers Association and a director of the OneMaker Group, a maker ecosystem developer in Singapore.
Jigyasa Grover (Women Who Code)
Workshop of 2 hours
With over one billion devices activated, Android is an exciting space to make apps to help you communicate, organize, educate, entertain or anything else you’re passionate about. Clearly there’s a demand for Android app development, and it’s turning the platform with the lovable green mascot into more and more of a strong first choice rather than just a secondary option. So if you’ve been intent on, thinking about, or simply playing with the idea of learning Android… Make Your First Android App is here for you! The session aims at introducing budding developers with the basic concepts and terminology in Android Development. It shall begin from scratch and discuss how to setup the environment and build a very own personal Android App with a Splash Screen for starters.
About Jigyasa Grover:
An enthusiastic Open Source crusader, I am a feminist by heart. Helping bridge the gender gap in the technology world, I have been involved with global communities as the Director of Women Who Code Delhi Network, Leading Google Women Techmakers Delhi chapter and also mentoring and organizing Learn IT, Girl ! . Pursuing Bachelor of Technology in Computer Science and Engineering from Delhi Technological University INDIA, I have successfully completed Google Summer of Code 2015 and have also mentored pre-university students step into the world of open-source development via Google Code-In under FOSSASIA. I have been recognized as one of the contributors in Pharo 4.0 IDE released in April 2015 and has also authored tutorials published in the official documentations of Pharo. I have also been contributing to many Open Source Projects in Pharo/Smalltalk, Android and Python and have also won hackathons and app development challenges. I am also involved with tech societies like The Institute of Engineering and Technology (IET) and Google Developers Group New Delhi.
Lunch boxes are provided at the exhibition hall A (Scientiest for a Day area) and at a number of tracks. Please use your voucher, that you got at the registration in the morning to get your box.
Martin Bähr (BLUG)
Workshop of 2 hours
Roassal is a highlevel framework for visualizing data written in Smalltalk. In this workshop we will use it to build an interactive mind-mapping application. You will learn about development in Pharo Smalltalk in a hands-on approach.
About Martin Bähr:
Martin Bähr is using and developing Free Software and Open Source for more than 20 years because he believes that knowledge should not be owned by a few people but freely shared with everyone and contribute to the advancement of civilization. He is a contributor to the Pike programming language, the Foresight Linux distribution and several other Free Software Projects. He co-edited a book on Pike and organized developer conferences. Throughout his career Martin focused on developing and advocating Free Software. He likes to learn new programming languages, currently Smalltalk and Common Lisp. He is born in Europe and has lived and worked in several countries around our planet Earth. He came to china in 2008. He is currently the CTO at eKita, a startup in Bangkok, and the General Manager at Realsoftservice, a Linux service firm in Beijing. He is also serving as the secretary of the Beijing GNU/Linux User Group.
Elda Webb (OneMakerGroup)
Workshop of 1.5 hours
Let's learn how to model 3D in the browser. This workshop is for kids who are interested in 3D modeling and would like to learn the first steps into the 3D world before they progress to 3D print outs.
About Elda Webb:
I have a very curious mind and I strive to integrate design, technology and learning in all my endeavors. I’m currently the Lead Curriculum Developer for OneMaker Group and my main objective is to help makers of all ages build up their creative confidence by breaking the barriers of the mind, and show that everybody have the potential to be a maker and a designer. Before joining OMG, I worked at Autodesk for over 9 years in Singapore as a Learning Content Developer. I hold a B.A in Architecture from the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education and has worked as a 3D modeler and Graphic Designer in Mexico, USA and Canada. She is actively involved in the Singapore Maker community.
Lunch boxes are provided at the exhibition hall A (Scientiest for a Day area) and at a number of tracks. Please use your voucher, that you got at the registration in the morning to get your box.
Syabiqah Phang (OneMaker Group)
Workshop of 2 hours
Our smart nation of tomorrow starts up planting seeds of education today. A future of authentic learning is already here as we work with microcontrollers, sensors and connectivity to learn about our environment and make smarter decisions. Explore how the potpurri of sensors, big data and deep learning for kids can make everyday learning part of future education.
About Syabiqah Phang:
Kids will explore how to create connected devices and how to send automated actions to these objects over the internet. This will help them to be confident when navigating the exciting yet unknown IoT world of the future.
Wilfred Wong (OneMaker Group)
Workshop of 2 hours
Introducing kids to different types of digital fabrication techniques. (3D printing, laser cutting, CNC milling.)
About Wilfred Wong:
Introducing kids to different types of digital fabrication techniques. (3D printing, laser cutting, CNC milling.)
Gabriel Perumal (Ground Up Initiative)
Workshop of 1.5 hours
This workshop serves as an introduction to electronics to beginners. They will learn how to make simple circuits and also be introduced to electronic chips that go behind some of the toys that kids play with. Each Participant will get to play with an 3 in 1 DIY electronic kit. Course Objectives 1) Learn Basic Breadboarding 2) Be introduced to components such as resistors,leds and buzzers. 3) Know how IC chips work 4) Learn how to build a LED blinker with Melody
About Gabriel Perumal:
Kids are the future of the world it is our duty to provide them the necessary tech skills whether software or hardware but also by making it easy for them to learn step by step and to inspire them that if they have a willing mind and a good spirit u can accomplish everything if u put your mind to it
Gabriel Perumal (Ground Up Initiative)
Workshop of 1.5 hours
Scratch a software developed by MIT is used to develop games through logical skills. Through the ease of the scratch software interface it is now used to control the Arduino Microcontroller to blink lights and also the use of sensors to control the Scratch Character Course Objectives 1) Use Scratch to develop logical and critical reasoning skills to build games. 2) Learning how Scratch can be used to interface with Arduino and Electronics 3) Learn to use sensors to control the “behaviour” of the character. 4) Build a “Motion detection” System
About Gabriel Perumal:
Kids are the future of the world it is our duty to provide them the necessary tech skills whether software or hardware but also by making it easy for them to learn step by step and to inspire them that if they have a willing mind and a good spirit u can accomplish everything if u put your mind to it
Jaminy Prabaharan (Smart guidance for blind)
Talk of 20 minutes
Smart Guidance for blind: Shoes(can be replaced by some other way) for the blind based on detecting obstructions and showing a path using sensors, cameras and principles of machine learning in Matlab using image processing: https://video-sit4-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hvideo-xlp1/v/t42.3356-2/12662214_1716573171899154_409955334_n.mp4/video-1454345564.mp4?vabr=369772&oh=ac6e29831a91c5c4eaed0e82b16af039&oe=56B70EB1&dl=1 We started working on this project three weeks back for Hackathon5.0 organized by Lakshya Foundation. Our main aim of this project is to give the total guidance for the blind.Have you all ever thought of the problems faced by the blind people? No will be the answer unless otherwise you are a blind.Even we didn't realise the problems before starting our project.First we started with listing down the problems faced by the blind people and then started finding the solutions for it. So we came up with the following problems. 1. Difficulty in finding the obstructions on their path. 2. Difficulty in reading the road signs and traffic signals.So they can't either drive or walk safely on the road. 3. Difficulty in reading the price tag.So sellers can cheat them. 4. Difficulty in reading books.Since all the books are not translated to Braille letters. 5. Can't watch TV. So we divided these problems into easy, advance and crazy to work on it.First we started working on the basic problems.The first solution we came up was using ultrasonic sensors to detect the obstructions.We created an app which is user friendly (blind person just have to tap) to give the voice output.So we just fixed 3 ultra sonic sensors( per shoe front,back,left/right) and depending on the sensor output the voice will be given as output.Still we have problem in detecting in hanging obstructions and pits.We are trying to replace something with shoe which can fulfil all the conditions.Within a span of two weeks we have completed this task.Further we are working with image processing, machine learning and artificial intelligence to find the solutions for reading road signs(Image processing) and traffic signals(Colour recognition), reading books(Text to speech conversion) and finally for watching TV. As an engineer I suggest others also to work on the projects which would help the highly needed people. Because we never know the problems faced by the poor people and differently-able people. And they don't have enough knowledge or capability to work on their own problems. ------------------------------------------ Problem Background: Corneal Blindness is one of the most common causes of blindness in India. India shoulders the largest burden of global blindness, about 3.5 million across the country with 30000 new cases being added each year. People who are visually impaired face no shortage of problems in India, where living with disabilities can be especially challenging. Pedestrians are often forced off of side walks that are cluttered with vendors, animals and other obstacles. And because of the difficulty of moving independently, accessing services is also difficult. Blind people typically use canes, of course, but the traditional cane can't detect objects higher than the waist. Problem Statement: The problem is now to provide them with an alternative guide to the cane, a guide with a more human like approach. Proposed Solution: Our proposed solution is to develop shoes starting from the most basic level to a highly advanced AI version of those shoes. The steps are as follows: ⦁ Develop a model of shoes with 4 sensors for 4 different directions. These sensors can be distance or IR Led ones. A microcontroller interface would be in place to transmit voice messages through a communications module to the headset of the person wearing the shoes. ⦁ In the intermediate stage the model would contain 4 cameras instead of sensors. The camera’s working on basic image processing would be able to make out textures, landscapes and obstructions to a degree as defined by the manufacturer. ⦁ The final stage would involve trying to get the shoes to define the situations it are placed in by themselves using image processing and machine learning. End users: The blind people around the world. Since our final product doesn't make use of smart/mobile phone, the person who can use it need not be aware of it. The output will be given as sound through headsets. Devices: Shoes, 4 cameras, 4 sensors, headset, a micro controller and other electronic components Platforms, Technologies to be used: Machine learning in Matlab using image processing, interfacing camera, sensor and headset Data set, tools, resources useful in developing solution: Can choose any image processing tools and other technologies.
About Jaminy Prabaharan:
I am currently studying in third year of B.Tech in Electronic and communication Engineering in National Institute of Technology,Warangal under Rajiv Ghandhi Memorial scholarship scheme(provide by ICCR). Awards, achievements and certificates Awarded certificate of merit (High Distinction) for Australian National Chemistry Quiz conducted by Royal Australian Chemical Institute in 2009. Awarded certificate of merit (Distinction) for Australian National Chemistry Quiz conducted by Royal Australian Chemical Institute in 2011 Awarded certificate of merit in the Essay Competition 2007 (English Medium) conducted by the Sri Lanka-Thailand Society in association with the Royal Thai Embassy. Awarded certificate of Distinction for Sri Lankan Mathematical Olympiad 2010 conducted by Sri Lanka Olympiad Mathematics Foundation. Projects Worked Developed VHDL model for “Jewellery Lock” and MIPS and implemented on FPGA board. Developed Line following robot for National Robotic Competition. Designed our own microcontroller board within 24 hours of time for Hackathon 3.0 organized by Lakshya Foundation. Developed Bluetooth controlled temperature indicator using Galileo board. Developed password controlled door lock model within 12 hours of time for Electronic weekend. Worked on “Smart Bin” for Hackathon organized by GHCI (Grass Hopper Celebration in India). Developed the basic prototype for sensor based wireless valve controller. This project was selected for pitch talk in AugustFest-India’s largest startup conference. Conferences attended Developed the basic prototype for sensor based wireless valve controller. This project was selected for pitch talk in AugustFest-India’s largest startup conference. Other qualification Able to work with C programming language, photoshop, MATLAB & AutoCAD. Have good knowledge in working with Arduino UNO, Galileo board, FPGA board. Capable of completing project within the time limits. Capable of learning new languages easily Languages Proficiency – English, Tamil, Sinhala, Telugu
Level 1, Eco Garden Lab
Abhishek Agrawal (Makino Asia Private Limited)
Talk of 20 minutes
I'm going to give an overview about the machine tool industry and how manufacturing takes place at a scale. I'm going to give details about the processes and the machines used to achieve production at that scale. I'll also discuss some popular case studies like Foxconn manufacturing line for Apple. It will be insightful for start-ups to understand the the ecosystem and challenges when you manufacture at scale and the challenges to bring a product from a prototype to production stage.
About Abhishek Agrawal: