MESSAGE
DATE | 2003-02-11 |
FROM | From: "Stanley A. Klein"
|
SUBJECT | Re: [hangout] Re: eGovOS conference in D.C.
|
At 05:24 PM 2/11/2003 -0500, Richard Stallman wrote: >Who knows more about federal procurement is not really important here. >Even free software jobs is a side issue. What is important here is >what the free software movement should do about this event and its >replacement of real advocacy with weak advocacy is the real issue. > >Could people please avoid getting distracted by these side issues? >
I have copied from their web page the goals of the conference and the list of speakers (not yet organized into sessions). After reviewing the material, do you really think that the presence of one speaker from Microsoft and another a known Microsoft shill (who, IIRC appeared in a panel session debate at the last conference) blemishes the conference badly enough to turn it from real advocacy to weak advocacy?
Stan Klein
---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Here are the goals of the conference (from their web page):
The conference will draw participants from local and national organizations from both the public and private sector.
The goals of the conference include:
* the presentation of best practices * raising awareness * sharing of experiences among policy makers, donors, users/consumers, universities, and industry specialists in Open Source, e-Government and related fields.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
The complete speakers list (not yet organized into sessions, or at least not sessions posted on their web site), again from the web page, is below. Note that invited speakers are marked "invited" and speakers who submitted abstracts and got them accepted are marked "abstract." I don't know if the unmarked speakers applied or were invited. Perhaps they are panelists or debaters.
Preliminary Agenda
European Perspectives Track
1.Barbara Held, Bundesministerium des Innern, Germany 2.Arnold Reinders, Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties, The Netherlands 3.Caroline Halcrow, Office of the e-Envoy, UK [Invited] 4.Jean-Paul Degorce-Dumas, Agence pour les Technologies de l'Information et de la Communication, France 5.John Gotze, ITST, Denmark [Invited] 6.Philippe Aigrain, European Commission (Information Society General Directorate) 7.Mr. Váquez de Miguel, Junta de Extremadura, LINEX [Abstract] 8.François Elie, ADULLACT 9.Rishab Ghosh, Institute of Infonomics 10.Georg Greve, Free Software Foundation Europe 11.Alastair Burt, DFKI (ASWAD project) 12.Yann Fraval, GIP MDS (EUPKI project) 13.Jean-Claude Dauphin, UNESCO 14.Ralf Nolden, KDE/Kdevelop
Japan
1.Katsuya Makiuchi, Ministry of Economic Trade and Industry, Japan, Japanese e-Government strategy and Open Source Policy [Abstract]
Mexico
1.Sandino Araico Sánchez, Presidencia de la República, Mexico, Advanced Technology for Dynamic Sites [Abstract]
Open Source Business Cases Track
1.Robert Lefkowitz, Merrill Lynch, Open Source at Merrill Lynch: "Free" as in "Market" [45] 2.Stacey Quandt, Giga Information Group, Business Cases: Open Source Software and TEI [2]
Security Track
1.Marcus Sachs, White House Office of Cyberspace Security 2.Peter Loscocco, National Security Agency (NSA), NSA's Security-enhanced Linux [Abstract] 3.Fritz Schulz, Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) [Invited] 4.Terry Bollinger, The MITRE Corporation, Use of Free and Open Source Software in the U.S. Department of Defense [Abstract] 5.David A. Wheeler, Institute of Defense Analyses (IDA), Security Evaluations and Open Source Software / Free Software: C [Abstract] 6.Tony Stanco, Cyber Security Policy and Research Institute 7.John Viega, Secure Software, Security Assurance for Software [Abstract] 8.Martin Roesch, Sourcefire, Open Source Security for the Federal Government [Abstract] 9.Jay Beale, Bastille Linux,
Federal Enterprise Architecture/XML Track
1.Robert Haycock [Invited], Office of Management and Budget's Federal Enterprise Architecture Program Management Office, The Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) - An Overview of Vision and Progress [Abstract] 2.Susan Turnbull (GSA)/Brand Niemann (EPA) 3.Tod Jackson and Steve Wheat (co-presentors), Enterprise Architects for Administrative IT at the University of Illinois and Co-Founders of the OpenEAI Software Foundation, "The OpenEAI Project: Open Source Enterprise Application Integration Software and Methodology" [Abstract] 4.Michel Biezunski, Coolheads Consulting, Cognitive Topic Map Web Sites-Aggregating Information Across Individual Agencies and E-Gov Initiatives [Abstract] 5.Rick Rogers, Fenestra, E-Forms for e-Gov: The Use of XML Standards-based Applications [Abstract] 6.Kevin William, Blue Oxide Technologies, The XML Collaborator-Industry Standards Interoperability and Applicability to E-Gov Initiatives [Abstract] 7.Jeff Harrison, Open GIS Consortium,Open Web Services Demonstration and Geospatial One-Stop Portal E-Gov Initiative [Abstract] 8.Joseph Chiusano, Booz Allen Hamilton, XML Registries: The OASIS/ebXML Registry [Abstract] 9.Sam Hunting, eTopicality, Inc., Goose 1.0: The Open Source, RESTful Topic Map Server [Abstract] 10.John Rehberger, USDA
State Government Perspectives and Projects Track
1.Jim Willis, Rhode Island Secretary of State, Open Source Software and Open Government [Abstract] 2.Tony Bibbs, State of Iowa - Information Technology Department, Enterprise Authentication & Authorization [Abstract]
eHealth Track
1.Gary Christopherson (Special Advisor to the Undersecretary for Health), Ross Fletcher (VA Medical Center), Peter Groen, (The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs), VistA & HealthePeople [Abstract] 2.K.S. Bhaskar, VP, Sanchez Computer Associates, Inc, Building the VistA Global Community [Abstract] 3.Stanley Saiki, U.S. Departments of Defense and Veteran Affairs, Technology Transfer of Open Source VistA . Creating a Medical Informatics Collaborative [Abstract] 4.Walt Biggs, Northwest Software Engineering, Implementation of US DVA VistA in a State Hospital [Abstract] 5.Andreas Tille, Robert Koch-Institute, Integrated software environment for all medical tasks based on Debian, GNU/Linux [Abstract] 6.Jeff Gunther, Intalgent Technologies, Realizing the Benefits of an Open Source Integration Engine [Abstract] 7.Andrew Ho, UCLA, OIO: Open Infrastructure for Outcomes [Abstract] 8.David Forslund, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Demonstration of open source, open architecture medical surveillance [Abstract] 9.Virginia Foster, Julie Pavlin, Jay Mansfield, Eugene Elbert and COL Patrick Kelley, U.S. Department of Defense - Global Emerging Infections System (DoD-GEIS), ESSENCE: An Example of a Non-Traditional Electronic Infectious Disease [Abstract] 10.Ross Lazarus, Harvard University, Open source in Sndromic Surveillance for Bioterrorism and Public Health Preparedness [Abstract] 11.Brand Niemman, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Center for Diseases Control, XML Web Services in the Integration of Environmental and Health Information 12.Beatriz de Faria Leao (Ministry of Health Brazil/DATASUS), Angela Maria Tornélli Ribeiro, (Secretary of Health of São José dos Campos City), Manoel Lemos, (Singularity Systems), The Brazilian National Health Card Project [Abstract] 13.Jules Berman, National Cancer Institute, Open Source Confidentiality Methods [Abstract] 14.Pete Palmer, VisionShare Inc, Architecture for Global PKI Interoperability 15.Daniel L Johnson, Red Cedar Clinic - Mayo Health System, Open Source: A New Management Paradigm [Abstract] 16.Douglas Goldstein, Medical Alliances - eHealthcare.net, Unleashing Open Source Software in Healthcare [Abstract] 17.Ben Reis, Markle Foundation, Challenges and Suggested Strategies Growth of Open Source Healthcare [Abstract] 18.Roger Maduro, Linux Infrastructure, Open Source Solutions for Medical Practices [Abstract] 19.Joseph Dal Molin, e-cology corporation, UCLA/AAMC Health Open Source Collaboratory Initiative [Abstract] 20.Nick Guzman, Jim Michelson, The George Washington University Center for Emergency Preparedness and Cyber Security Policy and Research Institute, Washington, DC, Building a Secure Collaborative Environment Using Zope's Content Management Framework 21.David C. Kibbe, Director Health Information Technology, American Academy of Family Physicians, Open Source Electronic Health Record for Office-Based Medical Practice 22.Thomas Lewis, Primary Care Coalition, CHLCare: An Open Source Electronic Medical Record System to Support Primary Health Care for the Uninsured [Abstract]
Corporate Open Source Perspectives Track
1.Jason Matusow, Microsoft, Shared Source: The Microsoft Perspective [Abstract] 2.Michael Tiemann, Red Hat, 3.Merry Beekman, Red Hat, 4.Stormy Peters, Hewlett-Packard, The Business and Economics of Linux and Open Source [Abstract] 5.Dave Boutcher, IBM, Managing Open Source and Proprietary in one Organization [Abstract] 6.Mary Ann Fisher, IBM, 7.K.S.(Doc) Shankar, IBM, Linux Security - What's now? What's next? [Abstract] 8.Dr. Ernest Prabhakar, Apple, Mac OS X: The Open Alternative [Abstract] 9.Whit Diffie, SUN, Security 10.Danese Cooper, SUN, OpenOffice/StarOffice/MadHatter/Liberty Alliance 11.Farrukh Najmi, SUN Microsystems, and Joseph Potvin, Public Works and Government Services Canada, An Open Source ebXML Registry for eGov [Abstract] 12.Mary Ann Davidson, Oracle, Security 13.Tim Solm, DELL [Invited] 14.Rick Jones, Intel [Invited]
Open Source Policy Track
1.David Wheeler, Institute of Defense Analyses (IDA), Why OSS/FS? Look at the Numbers! [Abstract] 2.Brian Kahin, University of Maryland, Patents and Open Source [Abstract] 3.Andrew Josey, The Open Group, Standards - Bridging the Generation Gap between Linux and the UNIX [Abstract] 4.Bruce Abramson, Charles River Associates, What Policymakers Need to Know about Open Source [Abstract] 5.Scott McNeil, Free Standards Group, Open Source, Free Standards [Abstract] 6.Robert Kramer, Initiative for Software Choice, Why Software Choice Is Necessary For Free Trade [Abstract] 7.Bruce Perens, Cyber Security Policy and Research Institute, Re-Thinking Standards Organization Policies to support Open Source [Abstract] 8.Walt Scacchi, Institute for Software Research University of California, Understanding the Potential for Open Government [Abstract]
Legal Issues Track
1.Jay Westermeier, Open Source Software Legal Issues 2.Daniel Ravicher, Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler, Open Source Software Legal Issues [Abstract] 3.Mark Webbink, Red Hat, Open Source Software Legal Issues 4.David Satola, World Bank, Open Source Software Legal Issues [Invited]
Open Source Projects Track
1.Nat Friedman, Ximian, Inc., The Enterprise Linux Desktop: Addressing Corporate Needs [Abstract] 2.David Axmark, MySQL AB, MySQL, The Commercial OpenSource Database [Abstract] 3.Shaun Savage, MozApps, Secure Database using Mozilla [Abstract] 4.David Boswell, mozdev.org, Creating Applications with Mozilla [Abstract] 5.David Corcoran, MUSCLE, Movement for the Use of Smart Cards in a Linux Environment [Abstract] 6.Dennis Aebersold, The University of Oklahoma - Information Technology, SINAPSE: Virtually Raising the Bar for Higher Education [Abstract] 7.Mitchell Stoltz, Netscape Communications, Securing Open Source Software: Advantages and Challenges [Abstract] 8.Hans Reiser, Namesys.com, Should Developers Be Preferred Service Providers [Abstract] 9.David Sean Taylor, Apache Software Foundation, Developing Enterprise Portals with Open Source and Jakarta [Abstract] 10.Jean-Michel Dalle, Univ. Paris VI & Univ. Paris-Dauphine, Open Development in Education and Research Institutions [Abstract] 11.Argyn Kuketayev, TechSpan, Apache Cocoon: XML publishing framework [Abstract] 12.Aron Trauring, Zoteca, Python, Twisted and EAI [Abstract] 13.David Sklar, Author, Web Programming with PHP [Abstract]
Experiences of Open Source Companies and Consultants Track
1.Peter Gallagher, devIS, Real World Egov Solutions: Internet Architecture, XML, and Open Source [Abstract] 2.Robert Page, Zope Corporation, Zope [Abstract] 3.Ian Murdock, Progeny, Rethinking the Linux Desktop: Linux as Platform, not Product [Abstract] 4.Anthony Awtrey, I.D.E.A.L. Technology Corporation, Open Source Software in Simulation and Training [Abstract] 5.Michael Kochanik, Collabnet, Collaborative Software Development, Open Source, and Co- sourcing [Abstract] 6.Toby Ford, USinternetworking, Inc., Custom Monitoring and Open Source - How to Reduce Costs [Abstract] 7.Alexander Perry, Quantum Magnetics, Open Source is the Executable Open Specification [Abstract] 8.Jeff Gunther, Intalgent Technologies, Realizing the Benefits of an Open Source Integration Engine [Abstract] 9.Paul Ramsey, Refractions Research, Open Source Tools for Mapping and Spatial Data [Abstract] 10.Adam Rossi, PlatinumSolutions, Inc., Promoting Inter-Agency Collaboration With Open Source Software [Abstract] 11.Benjamin Lewis, Advanced Technology Solutions, Inc., Open Source GIS and the Development of a National Spatial Data [Abstract] 12.Steve McGough, Internet Technologies, Inc., Examples of Open Source Technologies in Government and Enterprise [Abstract] 13.Pete Palmer, VisionShare Inc, Architecture for Global PKI Interoperability [Abstract] 14.Sead Muftic, SETECS Corporation, SETECS PKI [Abstract] 15.Jacob Hallén, Python Business Forum, OpenSource Software, Government and Industry [Abstract]
____________________________ New Yorker Free Software Users Scene Fair Use - because it's either fair use or useless....
|
|