Last week's 8th Jornadas Regionales de Software Libre (Free
Software Regional Sessions) at the University of Belgrano in Buenos
Aires, Argentina, was an opportunity for around 1,300 FOSS
enthusiasts to share experiences, learn more, and have fun
together.
Newcomers and advanced users, sysadmins and developers, all
learned about and discussed a wide range of issues in more than 140
sessions in three days. There were also a space for the community
organizations and companies to show, talk, and advocate about their
activities and products.
As one of the biggest events of its kind in this part of the
continent, the conference attracted people from all corners of
Argentina and from other countries of the region. It was a free
event (free as in beer) -- participants only needed to register in
advance and come to enjoy it.
Along with the local speakers, some "big names" of the free
software world made the trip to Buenos Aires. Attendees heard from
Chris Hoffman of the Mozilla Foundation, Rik van Riel of Red Hat,
Jon "maddog" Hall of Linux International, kernel developer
Christoph Hellwig, consultant Dag Wieers, Google's Mario Bonilla,
and Python core developer Raymond Hettinger.
The most hilarious moment happened at one of the keynotes.
Originally, Canonical founder (and former space tourist) Mark
Shuttleworth was scheduled to speak, but he could not come, so
organizers reassigned his time slot. In a dark auditorium, with a
screen projecting images of planets and stars and with music from
2001: A Space Odyssey playing at loud volume, Hall appeared on
stage wearing an astronaut suit and joking that he was Shuttleworth
coming from year 2040. He delivered all of his lecture wearing that
suit, only taking off the helmet so he could speak.
The high turnout for the show, and especially so many new
people who wanted to get introduced to free software, signals the
importance of FOSS in the region, and shows the community that
there is a lot of opportunity to spread its usage.
This year's event was organized by CaFeLUG, the Capital
Federal Free Software Users Group, with support from other
organizations and sponsor companies.
The conference takes place in a different city every year. In
previous years, Argentine cities Rosario, Cordoba, and Mendoza, and
Montevideo, Uruguay, have been host cities. Next year's 9th
Jornadas Regionales will be held in Chile.
In response to assignment:
iReport for CNN