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Live Webinar October 11th, 2016 1:00 PM – 4:00 PM EDT
Activity Type: Education – Course or Training  3 Hour  3 PDU’s free
Provider: O’Reilly

O’Reilly’s Open Source 101 Mini Conference:
3 One Hour Sessions

Open source software is everywhere, but do you know where to start if you want to contribute, convince your manager your next project should be open source, or avoid recreating the wheel?

Join four seasoned open source contributors, as they discuss why open source is so important, how to avoid obstacles, and find the right solutions for your project.

Learn—and how you can apply:

  • How to begin your open source project
  • How to convince business leaders that open source is the right choice
  • What open source methods, tools, and culture exist to help with your project

This online conference is for you because:

  • Developer considering contributing to an open source project
  • Business person wondering if open source is right for your company
  • Project manager wondering if open source will work for your next project

 Session 1:
How-to: Your First Contribution

Starting with little more than enthusiasm, I made my first contribution to the Apache Spark project this year. I will tell the story of this journey, sharing the key lessons I learned in a format that serves as a guide for anyone looking to get started, especially if they don’t know where to begin.

Presenter: Michelle Casbon (LinkedIn profile) Director of Data Science at Qordoba, where she helps companies improve their global reach by simplifying the localization process through the use of machine learning. Previously she built tools for generating predictions on textual datasets as a Senior Data Science Engineer at Idibon.  Michelle completed a Masters at the University of Cambridge, focusing on NLP, speech recognition, speech synthesis, and machine translation. She loves working with and contributing to open source projects and has contributed to Apache Spark and Apache Flume.

Session 2:
Want Students Ready to Contribute?
Let’s Discuss What They Should Know!

To contribute to an open source project, students should learn open source methods, tools, and culture. However, many computing degrees do not cover these topics. We will describe why we think learning open source is important, what blockers exist now, and the possible paths to a solution, including a National Science Foundation-funded effort to advance FOSS learning in undergraduate computing programs.

Presenter: Gina Likins (LinkedIn profile) has been working in internet strategy for more than 20 years. She’s passionate about finding ways to help our open source communities thrive and be more welcoming for everyone. In addition to her interests in communication, conflict resolution and open source community dynamics, Gina also has a long history with and interest in education.  Gina also  taught both high school biology and environmental science. Her current role on the the University Outreach team at Red Hat exists to help universities incorporate open source into their curriculum.

Presenter: Heidi Ellis (LinkedIn profile) Professor Western New England University, has been active in software engineering education for the past 20 years. She has been involving students in humanitarian free and open source software (HFOSS) since 2006 and has been co-PI on four different NSF grants to support this effort.  As a part of a group of academics who are working with Red Hat to support Professor’s Open Source Software Experience (POSSE) workshops that bring professors up to speed on student involvement in HFOSS projects. She has multiple publications and presentations related to student participation in HFOSS.

Session 3:
How To Convince Your Manager To Go Open Source

I will talk about how I convinced my managers to go Open Source. Very often you hear similar concerns and sorrows about loss of business, inconvenient transparency and the loss of control. Based on some examples I will give you some guidance how you can argue against this points and how you can convince your manager to go Open Source.

Presenter:  Christian Grail (LinkedIn profile) is a development architect at SAP in Walldorf,Germany, working in the User Experience and Design team, where he helps to dramatically improve the appearance and usability of enterprise applications. Christian loves working with Angular, SAP UI5, and Node.js and is evangelizing agile development methods like test-driven development, pair programming, and code reviews.

Click to register for:
Open Source 101

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Technical Project Management Leadership Strategic & Business Management

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