[static-web] Update GUADEC 2017 schedule with the open talks
- From: Sam Thursfield <sthursfield src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [static-web] Update GUADEC 2017 schedule with the open talks
- Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2017 10:25:12 +0000 (UTC)
commit d9af1228427008b9b03dcba9d438db1cfd2e1fc6
Author: Sam Thursfield <sam thursfield codethink co uk>
Date: Wed Aug 2 11:24:18 2017 +0100
Update GUADEC 2017 schedule with the open talks
This is useful for the video editing scripts.
guadec-2017/schedule.xml | 2 +-
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/guadec-2017/schedule.xml b/guadec-2017/schedule.xml
index 646c362..94880f1 100644
--- a/guadec-2017/schedule.xml
+++ b/guadec-2017/schedule.xml
@@ -1 +1 @@
-<schedule><version>1.0</version><conference><acronym>GUADEC2017</acronym><city>Manchester,
UK</city><day_change>00:00</day_change><days>3</days><end>2017-07-30</end><start>2017-07-28</start><timeslot_duration>00:15</timeslot_duration><title>GUADEC
2017</title><venue>Manchester Metropolitan University</venue></conference><day date="2017-07-28"
end="2017-07-28T19:00:00+02:00" index="1" start="2017-07-28T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Turing - G29"><event
guid="fb5e3081-c1f5-5657-9abb-b2ce8a0c4008" id="7"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>Another yearly update on what Builder can do for you,
what has been added, and how your contribution workflow can be simplified.<br><br>Some topics
include:<br><br> - Making your development setup quick & easy w/ Flatpak<br> -
Profiling your project to find performance issues<br> - New build systems and integration points for
plugin authors<br> - Debugging your project&
lt;br> - How to quickly start contributing to an existing
project</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="1">Christian Hergert</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>7-state_of_the_builder</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>State of the
Builder</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="14127f56-48e5-590d-a9f7-bd236b7fbf79"
id="17"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>The web browser is indisputably the
single most important component of any operating system, and GNOME is no exception. Cross-platform browsers
like Firefox and Google Chrome work well everywhere, but at the expense of platform integration.
Cross-platform browsers cannot deliver a well-integrated user experience comparable to the Microsoft Edge or
Safari web browsers. If you haven't used one of thes
e two browsers recently, you might not even realize what you're missing on Linux. GNOME Web is the only
browser that can seriously hope to provide comparable desktop integration and user experience, but it suffers
from lack of users and contributors. Distributions that ship GNOME with Firefox, as well as GNOME
contributors that primarily use other browsers, are seriously harming our effort to improve GNOME Web. To
improve quality, we need all GNOME hands on deck to test regular daily usage of GNOME Web, report bugs, and
attract new users and
contributors.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="2">Michael Catanzaro</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>17-please_use_gnome_web</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>Please Use GNOME
Web</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="b34fba3d-270e-53e2-b
533-5fd29e3eb0de" id="29"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>Flatpak is an
application distribution and runtime system that brings sandboxed linux desktop apps to the masses.
<br><br>This talk will give a status update of the flatpak project and what has happened in this
year. It will also talk about new and interesting things happening in the echosystem around flatpak and where
we're going in the
future.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="3">Alexander Larsson</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>29-flatpak_status_update_and_future_plans</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Flatpak status update and future plans</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="fd063a2c-89c2-526a-ad12-d6d8fb2d3640" id="40"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T14:45:00+02:00</
date><description>In the last months Endless achieved another milestone to allow their users to transition
to learners. A new feature has been developed that let's the user peek at the code that runs an application,
modify it and run the new version of that application. A very challenging series of steps has been
simplified: the app source will be located and downloaded automatically, then displayed in GNOME Builder and
from there it can be explored, modified and run.<br><br>The Feature spawns across three core
GNOME technologies: the EOS Shell (derivative of the GNOME Shell), Flatpak and GNOME
Builder.<br><br>The authors aim is that this talk is suitable for a broad audience, hoping to
find the right balance between demonstrating the user interaction, talking about design decisions and giving
an technical overview of the components
involved.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><pers
on id="4">Simon Schampijer</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>40-seamless_integration_to_hack_desktop_applications</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Seamless integration to hack desktop applications</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="6e23ad85-3cf8-516f-804a-97cee4afb231" id="59"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>Linux distributions have been traditionally put together
from individual packages. In case of Fedora it's RPM packages. They have served us well, but they also have a
number of shortcomings: with small individual components the testing matrix explodes when we have to consider
different package versions, and upgrading such systems is often irreversable.<br><br>In this talk
I will lay out a plan how we are going to put together an atomic base system in Fedora Workstation with
flatpaks for individual applicat
ions. I will demo the latest progress we've made and show a great many
screenshots.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="5">Kalev Lember</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>59-atomic_workstation</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle /><title>Atomic
Workstation</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="3a9a1c99-8dd6-5b0e-bcf7-1c0c5df63c00"
id="102"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T17:15:00+02:00</date><description>Lightning talks of Google Summer
of Code and Outreachy
interns</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>18:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="6">GSoC and Outreachy Interns</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>102-interns_lightning_talks</slug><start>17:15</start><subt
itle /><title>Interns lightning talks</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="436e87eb-2b8e-52c2-95d1-48763a7b07f1" id="104"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:00:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and discussion panels to be
submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting edge developments or
anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can propose talks from 11.00,
and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At 15.30, the talk with the most
votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>104-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk
#1</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="bbfbd734-10aa-5f7a-8bb3-4255d7949690"
id="106"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T16:20:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and
discussion panels to be submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting
edge developments or anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can
propose talks from 11.00, and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At
15.30, the talk with the most votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>106-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #3</title><track
/><type>talk</ty
pe></event><event guid="87708b2d-cf10-5ff2-81d9-2545bb2fb198" id="112"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>Karen’s keynote will take a broad look at ethics in
technology, a topic that is fundamental to many of those involved in GNOME and something that becomes ever
more relevant as technology and society
develop.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>14:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="8">Karen Sandler</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>112-keynote_the_battle_over_our_technology</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Keynote: The Battle Over Our Technology</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="6889f591-0803-5f0e-9a14-ce5cbaf806fe" id="113"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T10:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><pe
rsons><person id="9">GUADEC Team</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>113-conference_opening</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle /><title>Conference
opening</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="363bdbee-1372-5ff6-9c7f-56f62d93dbb4"
id="200"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T09:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>200-registration</slug><start>09:30</start><subtitle /><title>Registration</title><track
/><type /></event></room><room name="Hopper - G44"><event guid="21cd49d0-45c8-5a83-8c03-8b9a785627aa"
id="8"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>Due to the amount of bugs in several
GNU/Linux projects such as GNOME or Fedora, good volunteers and new contributo
rs are crucial to fix them and make the projects better. <br>I emphasized the phrase good volunteers
and new good contributors because is not only to have a positive willing to do things here.<br>Many
other factors besides the knowledge of the project are fundamental, like interaction, usability, English
skills, GNOME style in programming and following the pattern of designing.<br>In my local community I
have encountered many pros and cons during almost six years of promoting the Fedora and GNOME projects in
universities and social events. During my talk I will share those different experiences and the
vulnerabilities and improvements I faced in the
way.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="10">Julita Inca</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>8-different_ways_of_outreaching_newcomers</slug><s
tart>16:45</start><subtitle /><title>Different ways of outreaching newcomers</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="f25ee534-b1a2-513e-b8cc-526f695d0153" id="28"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T14:45:00+02:00</date><description>We find ourselves in a world where there are an
increasing number of ecosystems of computing devices and appliances that (try to) work seamlessly together to
allow people to listen and watch what they want, when, where and how they want to in their homes -- on their
TVs, tablets, through multi-room speakers, and so on.<br><br>We've made some headway in enabling
these in GNOME -- via the Sharing panel, and the massive amount of plumbing underneath it -- but there is a
huge gap between what we have, and where I think we need to be.<br><br>So this talk is in three
parts:<br><br>1. Where we are -- both in terms of the user experience (Sharing) and the software
stack (Rygel, GUPnP, PulseAudio, GStreamer)&l
t;br><br>2. Where I'd like us to be -- what kinds of connectivity do we want to enable? Is it
possible to do this with commodity hardware?<br><br>and<br><br>3. How we can get
there -- existing pieces to build on top of, missing pieces of the stack to add, and tying it together in a
way users can "get"</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="11">Arun Raghavan</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>28-dreaming_of_a_better_home_media_experience</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Dreaming of a better home media experience</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="1b0f7a57-4f8e-5897-855a-a1e0fe4a8de5" id="43"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>The Endless OS has always been a bit different from
regular Linux distros in that it offers a
n immutable system managed by OSTree and thus has always had an alternative way of installing
applications.<br>It is also one of the first operating systems using Flatpak as the main way of
managing applications by the user.<br><br>In this talk I will introduce the evolution of the
application story in the Endless OS, focusing on the adoption of Flatpak applications and the changes to
GNOME Software to integrate it better with the EOS desktop and to improve the UX for Endless’
users.<br><br>I will also talk about the problems of shipping apps in a world of very unreliable
or nonexistent internet connection and the solutions we implemented to give the best experiences to our
users. This talk should be interesting not only for those who want to know more about application management
in EOS but also for those who want to know more about how GNOME Software works and the and possibilities it
offers with its plugins system.</description><duration>00
:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person id="12">Joaquim
Rocha</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>43-limited_connectivity_endless_apps</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle /><title>Limited
connectivity, Endless apps!</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="bb353abf-cc6c-515a-ae06-d5bfffcae654" id="48"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>The newcomer guide is made for newcomers to get started
with GNOME development. Bastian Ilso and Carlos Soriano will tell the story of how the newcomer experience
changed in the past year and how that had a big impact on newcomer contributions, developer workflow and the
image of the GNOME community.<br>At the end of the talk we will have an open debate about what the next
steps should be to improve the experience. What do you think newcomers are looking for?
What should the ideal workflow
be?</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="13">Carlos Soriano</person><person id="14">Bastian
Ilsø</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>48-newcomer_genesis_evolution</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>Newcomer Genesis
Evolution</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="607c135b-31e8-5b66-ab0e-59f517e81290"
id="72"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>This year, GNOME turns 20. Over the
course of its history, the project has pioneered new ways of working and has set out a powerful mission for
itself: from championing usability and accessibility, to establishing the six month release cycle, GNOME has
been at the forefront of Free Software development. However, there are also risks for a project that has been
running this long: colle
ctive knowledge can be forgotten, and it is easy to lose touch with the beliefs that give a project
purpose.<br><br>In this talk, I'll ask the question: what is it that defines the GNOME project?
In attempting to provide my own answer, I'll describe the principles that I think make GNOME so important.
I'll also recount stories from GNOME's history, and in so doing make a case for what constitutes the
project's folklore. Finally, I'll ask the question: how do we ensure that, as GNOME looks to the future, the
project continues to nurture these
traditions?</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="15">Allan Day</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>72-the_gnome_way</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>The GNOME Way</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="01e8a7f0-684c-55b0-8b1c-930962a
49729" id="105"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T16:00:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks
and discussion panels to be submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present
cutting edge developments or anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You
can propose talks from 11.00, and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At
15.30, the talk with the most votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>105-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #2</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="46647784-a003-5e87-9fcf-881d1c42efb6" id="107"><attachments /><da
te>2017-07-28T16:20:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and discussion panels to be
submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting edge developments or
anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can propose talks from 11.00,
and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At 15.30, the talk with the most
votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>107-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #4</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event guid="fd199473-c615-5f85-9975-575ebe87a07a"
id="201"><attachments /><date>2
017-07-28T11:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>201-break</slug><start>11:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="d6b06dee-7e6c-5f25-87fb-3bc31998f997"
id="202"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T13:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>01:00</duration><end>14:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>202-lunch</slug><start>13:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Lunch</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="b8d33ab3-733c-5dd3-9921-24af014cac4f"
id="203"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T15:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>16:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>n
o-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>203-break</slug><start>15:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="abe4e817-53ef-5220-9c78-b15253d0ebc1"
id="204"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T18:15:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:45</duration><end>19:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>204-venue_closes</slug><start>18:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue closes</title><track /><type /></event></room></day><day date="2017-07-29"
end="2017-07-29T19:00:00+02:00" index="2" start="2017-07-29T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Turing - G29"><event
guid="d4776b28-450d-5c72-bbcd-16b813808106" id="5"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>I have been working on replacing the C code in librsvg,
GNOME's SVG rendering library, with Rust. Rust is one of the few high-l
evel languages that actually generates object code, which in turn can be linked into compiled C
code.<br><br>What started as an experiment in replacing gnarly C code with clean Rust code,
eventually turned into a full porting effort. Librsvg's public API/ABI remain the same as before, and only
the internals have Rust code in them. The result is a much safer library with trustworthy code. Not only is
the code safe by Rust's nature; it now has a bunch of unit tests that would have been very cumbersome to
write before.<br><br>This talk will explore:<br><br>* Brief intro to Rust's benefits
and philosophy.<br><br>* Tips for replacing C code with Rust.<br><br>* Refactorings
that are needed in C to replace it with Rust.<br><br>* Refactorings that are possible once Rust
is in place.<br><br>* Going from a codebase with zero unit tests to one that has a bunch of
tests!<br><br>* Having a
mixture of C and Rust code for certain implementation patterns.<br><br>* Replacing scary C
parsers with safe Rust parsers.<br><br>* How Rust clarified my thinking.<br><br>* Can
distros ship this?<br><br>* Should we replace GNOME library code with Rust, in
general?</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="16">Federico Mena Quintero</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>5-replacing_c_library_code_with_rust_what_i_learned</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Replacing C library code with Rust: what I learned</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="3e32c3e2-6bdb-5afa-be55-9b15f35398c8" id="14"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T15:00:00+02:00</date><description>In this talk, I'll have a look at some of the challenges
that GNOME faces at the moment, a br
ief look into the future, and how we can meet those head on and
thrive!</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="17">Neil McGovern</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>14-gnome_to_2020_and_beyond</slug><start>15:00</start><subtitle /><title>GNOME to 2020 and
beyond</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="6cf0e9df-438b-5b7d-907b-50f4b6f98237"
id="15"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>Since 2012, a service in the GNOME
infrastructure has been constantly building GNOME modules, committing the result to Ostree, and running
automated tests on the whole OS. From a single Git commit to a full blown virtual machine in a matter of
minutes. This service is called GNOME Continuous, our own continuous integration and delivery
pipeline.<br><br>Continuous has been the ma
jor driver to improve the quality of the whole GNOME project: for developers, by building their work; for
designers, by providing a bootable VM to perform design iteration and QA; to newcomers, by ensuring that
tools like jhbuild would be more reliable; to distributors and OSVs, who could ensure their products would be
based on a reliable set of components.<br><br>In this presentation we will talk about how
Continuous came to be, thanks to the work of Colin Walters; how it works; what are the goals of a CI/CD
pipeline like Continuous; and where do we go from
here.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="18">Emmanuele Bassi</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>15-continuous_past_present_and_future</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Continuous: Past, Present, and Future</title><track /><type>t
alk</type></event><event guid="bdff2d9f-cbd4-5bf3-8d87-f29e05f6aa61" id="50"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>With the new contribution workflow enabled by GNOME
Builder, it is now trivially easy for newcomers to clone a project, build it, and hack on
it.<br><br>This talk is about how you can use Meson's subprojects and wrapdb to have a very
similar experience on any operating system with just Meson and git.<br><br>At the same time, this
feature is also distro-friendly since all this machinery can be turned off with a single option, telling
Meson to only use dependencies provided by the
system.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="19">Nirbheek Chauhan</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>50-building_your_gnome_app_anywhere_with_meson</slug><start>10:00</
start><subtitle /><title>Building your GNOME app anywhere with Meson</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="5d769bed-f310-5afd-a9d5-2b7c1556d5a0" id="60"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>Happy Birthday GNOME! Ever wonder why the project is the
way it is? The GNOME project has had a long and exciting ride to this point. I'll go through some of the
early moments of the project that led us to the desktop that we know and love
today.</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>15:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="20">Jonathan Blandford</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>60-the_history_of_gnome</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle /><title>The History of
GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="9ec3f1f0-0feb-548e-833e-5c38721764c0"
id="63"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T10:30:00+02:00</date
<description>Shell present and near
future.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="21">Carlos Garnacho</person><person id="22">Florian
Müllner</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>63-muttergnomeshell_state_of_the_union</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Mutter/gnome-shell state of the union</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="cae033cb-4acd-5194-895c-1cd1dfb66e7c" id="100"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T16:00:00+02:00</date><description>The annual general meeting of the GNOME Foundation:
team reports</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>17:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="23">GNOME Board</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing - G29</room><slug>100-gnome_foundation_agm_part
_1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>GNOME Foundation AGM (part 1)</title><track
/><type>meeting</type></event><event guid="e92b8310-2623-54c4-be20-ce7391564083" id="101"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T17:15:00+02:00</date><description>The annual general meeting of the GNOME Foundation:
Q&A with the board.</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>18:15</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="23">GNOME Board</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>101-gnome_foundation_agm_part_2</slug><start>17:15</start><subtitle /><title>GNOME Foundation
AGM (part 2)</title><track /><type>meeting</type></event><event guid="05eb0f22-c9af-5862-aae8-4bb34772e1e0"
id="209"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T17:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:15</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</lice
nse><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>209-group_photo</slug><start>17:00</start><subtitle /><title>Group photo</title><track
/><type /></event></room><room name="Hopper - G44"><event guid="526ab1a5-9783-528c-9208-6ab1c1d7a07d"
id="31"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>Matrix.org is a relatively new open
standard for decentralised realtime communication - providing an open global network (including end-to-end
encryption) that links together communication silos such as Slack, IRC, Gitter, Telegram, XMPP etc. Matrix
has gained some popularity in the GNOME developer community since GIMPNet was bridged into the wider Matrix
ecosystem in March (https://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2017-March/msg00033.html), and
meanwhile Matrix's goals of entirely open source and democratised communication are quite aligned with the
ethos of the GNOME project.<br><br>This talk will be a formal introduction and
demonstration of the Matrix ecosystem, its APIs and spec, its clients/servers/bridges/bots, its end-to-end
encryption, its goals and its current status, as given by the project
lead.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="24">Matthew Hodgson</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>31-decentralised_open_communication_with_matrixorg</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Decentralised open communication with Matrix.org</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="c27e346f-5ef5-5845-aad6-f741a15a36a9" id="41"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>Emeus is a constraint-based layout manager and container
widget for GTK+.<br><br>Emeus allows programmers and designers to describe the UI in a way that
can be more natural from the UI building perspective, more expressi
ve and efficient than stacking boxes inside boxes.<br><br>At Endless we have been developing
Emeus to provide richer visual experiences in our apps and better tools for engineers and designers to work
together.<br><br>Here's what you'll see in this talk:<br><br>* A new way of creating
rich layouts for your GTK+ app.<br>* A display of layouts and widgets that we created at
Endless.<br>* How it brings programmers and designers
together.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="25">Martin Abente Lahaye</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>41-fantastic_layouts_and_where_to_find_them</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Fantastic Layouts And Where To Find Them</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="5068c0d6-7857-510f-9a2b-373c560b519b" id="62"><atta
chments /><date>2017-07-29T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>Tracker has become a foundation for many core
apps. It has provided a common metadata store for applications to share, making all of the data a giant
interconnected graph.<br><br>However, times change. There's now initiatives like flatpak that
make this interconnected graph more accessory, or even not desirable. This talk will cover the plans to make
Tracker a good citizen in the sandboxing world, and what this means for
applications.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="21">Carlos Garnacho</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>62-tracker__present_and_future</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>Tracker - present
and future</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="eaaf9612-272e-59df-81c0-406d441e9376"
id="65"><attachmen
ts /><date>2017-07-29T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>Come and hear about the latest developments in
LibreOffice and see how we continue to make the Linux Desktop and Free Software ever more useful for business
users.<br><br>Get an update on the awesome work from Caolan polishing our gtk3 and wayland
support. Checkout the latest new features in the LibreOfficeKit API - ripe for deeper use in GNOME Documents
- and the potential for testing out innovative new GNOME editors here. See LibreOffice Online - inspired by
gtk+/broadway - and what it can do<br>for you.<br><br>Also catch random thoughts and demos
on whatever seems
apposite.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="26">Michael Meeks</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>65-libreoffice_and_gnome</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitl
e /><title>LibreOffice and GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event></room><room
name="Elsewhere"><event guid="a74eebdc-899a-579d-a84f-ba8d18667403" id="205"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T09:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>205-venue_opens</slug><start>09:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue opens</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="4049ad77-c1eb-5e0a-b4c2-ca3c0de54f10"
id="206"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T11:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>206-break</slug><start>11:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="cdffc551-86dc-5f92-8d61-efe3fc42
76fa" id="207"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T13:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>01:00</duration><end>14:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>207-lunch</slug><start>13:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Lunch</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="53f0a9ac-99b8-5eb9-9fa3-3e914a2a89c7"
id="208"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T15:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>16:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>208-break</slug><start>15:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="0e481de3-2119-5f57-8d28-87c17229c2dd"
id="210"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T18:15:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:45</duration><end>19:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><lo
go /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>210-venue_closes</slug><start>18:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue closes</title><track /><type /></event></room></day><day date="2017-07-30"
end="2017-07-30T19:00:00+02:00" index="3" start="2017-07-30T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Turing - G29"><event
guid="24652dae-8d39-5a73-a8e5-aaddd983e107" id="22"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>Various GNOME modules have been building on Coverity
Scan for the last year. Has it been finding legitimate bugs, or ones which people are almost never going to
hit? What’s the best way to use static analysis? Why should developers care?<br><br>Warning: This
talk will contain Jenkins and
graphs.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="27">Philip Withnall</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</lice
nse><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>22-whats_coverity_static_analysis_ever_done_for_us</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle
/><title>What’s Coverity static analysis ever done for us?</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="c3cc55a3-5b08-5358-99f1-666bd7c54501" id="23"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>Cooking and recipes is not a new topic for the GNOME
community.<br>All the way back to 2007, the idea of a GNOME cook book was already around
(https://wiki.gnome.org/GnomeCookbook). For one reason or another, we never quite got there - but the idea
has stuck around, and after Guadec last year, the two of us got together to finally make GNOME recipes a
reality.<br><br>Our talk will cover the original design goals and the evolution of the design
from paper mock-ups and ideas, to refining a raw prototype and to the complete application that we have to
today. We will touch on the inter
action between design and development and how you can be successful in this even when you have to bridge a 7
hour time differential.<br><br>We will take a look ahead at whats coming in 3.26, and how the
original design goals are evolving and expanding as we build out the application.<br> <br>On the
technical side, we will explore some of the challenges and lessons learned during the development of recipes,
and we will explain how writing this application was useful for developing and refining new technologies such
as sandboxes, portals and new build systems. There may be an aside about portability.<br><br>Of
course, there will be a demo of
recipes.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="28">Matthias Clasen</person><person id="29">Emel Elvin
Yildiz</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing - G29</roo
m><slug>23-recipes__lessons_learned_from_creating_a_new_app</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Recipes - Lessons learned from creating a new app</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="c6ee3b58-3a6e-5330-9d4f-9739b72a2c95" id="26"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>GNOME 3.24 brought a lot of improvements in GJS, the
Javascript language bindings for GNOME, that power GNOME Shell, Polari, GNOME Documents, and many other
apps.<br><br>We moved to a more modern version of the Javascript engine. We gained support for a
lot of cool language features that take some of the rough edges off of Javascript's shady reputation. For
GNOME 3.26 we'll continue this modernizing process, and start improving the developer experience in GJS as
well.<br><br>Here's what you'll see in this talk:<br>- Cool stuff you never knew you could
do in GJS!<br>- How to modernize your app with ES6 features!<br>- De
bugging, documentation, and other developer tools!<br>- Sneak peek of what's to come in 3.26 and how
you can help!</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="30">Philip Chimento</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>26-modern_javascript_in_gnome</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle /><title>Modern Javascript
in GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="64fd49fb-3b1e-56cd-b85e-78c3389e6dce"
id="34"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T14:45:00+02:00</date><description>In the beginning there was a
keyboard. Then came the mouse. Then the touchpad, the mouse wheel, the trackpoint, the graphics tablet, the
joystick, the touchscreen, the touchpad without buttons but with pressure, the pen tablet with touch, the
joysticks with touchpads, the touchpad with trackpoints, the touch-capable mouse, gestures, ...
it all got rather complicated.<br><br>Over the last few years, we had a massive revamp of the
input stack on our desktops. This talk is a tour starting with lowest levels of contemporary input devices
and their common features and device types, going up through the intermediate levels where we add a lot of
the software features (like buttons on a touchpad) to the new bits and pieces we're adding to X and Wayland
to support these features all the way to the
application.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="31">Peter Hutterer</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>34-on_mice_touchpads_and_other_rodents</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle /><title>On mice,
touchpads and other rodents</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="5b5c389e-170b-5bcf-9e4d-74f8ff49c677" id="38"><attachments /><date
2017-07-30T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>In this talk, I will start by outlining our motivations behind
creating this new meta build system, based both on the emergence of new distribution models and also
lessons learned from existing meta build system implementations.<br><br>Then we will briefly
explore the abstract and rather simple design of BuildStream: A format and engine for the modeling and
processing of pipelines composed of elements which perform mutations on filesystem data from inside an
isolated sandbox environment.<br><br>Finally we will explore the various use cases of building
GNOME modules and outline how we intend to apply this new technology to improve the GNOME Developer
experience in various
ways.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="32">Tristan Van Berkom</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording
<room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>38-gnome_build_strategies_and_buildstream</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle
/><title>GNOME Build Strategies and BuildStream</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="6d2e7e92-c56f-5358-be16-4c22e07f2daf" id="44"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>In this talk we will go trough most of the not so
known features of Glade and introduce a refreshed UI which will improve the regular design workflow by
replacing the good old tool palette.<br><br>The walk trough will include:<br> - creating
custom composite widgets<br> - a catalog to add support for them<br> - JavaScript objects in
Glade<br><br>As a bonus, I might, just might, show my crazy idea to rewrite Glade from scratch
for Gtk4, just so that we can discuss it over some
beers!</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="33">Juan Pablo Uga
rte</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>44-how_to_get_better_mileage_out_of_glade</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle /><title>How to
get better mileage out of Glade</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="cd873c69-aae6-5edd-b537-cad7fbed6d67" id="52"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>I am a co-founder and technical lead of Ubuntu GNOME,
with our goal to bring a pure GNOME experience to Ubuntu some might wonder where that might be heading given
the recently annouced decision for Canonical to drop Unity and switch to GNOME. This will bring a new set of
challenges for the Ubuntu GNOME team, while our distro will not likely exist as a seperate entity and we will
merge development resources with the Canonical desktop team, we will remain as a community team to avoid the
possible distinction between community and Canonical may getting blurred.<
br><br>I will open my talk with a brief history of the Ubuntu GNOME project, why we started it and
what our goals were. We started the project with goal of bring pure gnome-shell to Ubuntu. At the time GNOME
3 was incredibly broken on both Ubuntu and Debian to the the point of being unusable. We managed to get
things into really good shape over the years but there have been challenges, mostly relating to the
co-existence with Unity, and having to maintain large patch delta’s to work with Unity
also.<br><br>Then comes the exciting stuff what is the future of GNOME on Ubuntu, where does the
Ubuntu GNOME team stand in the future? Canonical are already showing some resistance towards core components
of the GNOME stack, for example things like tracker and gdm. What part will Ubuntu GNOME play in pushing our
visions into the core Ubuntu Future GNOME desktop? I can’t be incredibly specific on this at this point we
are still in discussions with Canonical tea
ms at this stage, but all should be clear by GUADEC. This should fill the bulk of my talk, I see exciting
oppurtunities ahead and some more challenges going forward before we can get Canonical aligned with GNOME. I
will discuss these in detail during my
talk.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>14:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="34">Tim Lunn</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>52-bringing_gnome_home_to_ubuntu</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle /><title>Bringing GNOME
home to Ubuntu</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="343b5c9d-c4fa-5aa4-8563-1e271c788435"
id="103"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T17:15:00+02:00</date><description>Fast-paced and focused talks on
any and all subjects. All talks will be subject to a strict time limit of 5 minutes on stage (including
setup). Slides are welcome, but not compulsory.<br><br
>You will be able to sign up for a lightning talk slot from 11.00AM on Sunday 29th on a signup sheet at
the info desk. Talks will be accepted on a first come, first serve
basis.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>18:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons /><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>103-lightning_talks</slug><start>17:15</start><subtitle /><title>Lightning
talks</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="93bb2614-9440-5ad3-b7f4-95aa88a9629a"
id="108"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T16:00:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and
discussion panels to be submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting
edge developments or anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can
propose talks from 11.00, and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. A
t 15.30, the talk with the most votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>108-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #5</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="9482c5aa-b3ef-5cc5-bfdc-ffef6d4b7045" id="110"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:20:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and discussion panels to be
submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting edge developments or
anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can propose talks from 11.00,
and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At 15.30, the talk with the most
vo
tes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>110-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #7</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="be6d24b5-d3b6-5b8b-afa1-40edae3161c7" id="114"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T18:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:15</duration><end>18:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person
id="9">GUADEC Team</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>114-conference_closing</slug><start>18:00</start><subtitle /><title>Conference
closing</title><track /><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Hopper - G44"><event
guid="8e9c9810-06ed-5b96-af10-68729ba32773" id="1"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T14:45:00+02:00</date><description>Containerised Application technologies like AppImage,
Snappy and Flatpak promise a brave new world for Linux applications, free from the worries of shared
libraries and dependency issues. Just one problem, this is a road long travelled before, such as in the
application dark ages of Win32 applications and DLLs. And it worked out so wonderfully there... Do we risk a
future where, like the resurrected dinosaurs of Jurassic Park, this family of applications will break their
containment and start eating our users? This session will try to present a balanced argument about the
situation, frankly discussing the benefits promised by these technologies, but highlighting the very real
issues and risks their widespread adoption could, and in some cases are, already bringing to the
table.<br><br>The talk with cover the promised benefits of application contain
ers, such as AppImage, Snappy and Flatpak. It will detail the empowerment of developers who use the
technologies, the ability for upstream projects to have a much closer role in delivering their software, and
the benefits that brings to both the upstream projects and their users. But as a counter to those benefits,
the session will detail some of the risks and responsibilities that come with that technology. The
complexities of library integration, the risk of introducing new forms of dependency issues, and the
transference of responsibility for those issues, plus security, away from the current Distributions
delivering upstream projects towards those upstream projects directly. As a conclusion, the session will
present some suggestions to upstream projects adopting these technologies to start them down the road of
accepting those responsibilities directly, or working more closely with existing Distribution projects to
share the burdens these technologies now provide.</descr
iption><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person
id="35">Richard Brown</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>1-resurrecting_dinosaurs_what_can_possibly_go_wrong</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Resurrecting dinosaurs, what can possibly go wrong</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="23c23699-fdc5-5e08-aa98-ddc1aac45dae" id="6"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>After spending considerable amount of time prototyping
designs for GNOME, over and over again I've met with resistance to transitions as being a "waste of CPU/GPU
time" and not enjoying a wide acceptance among developers.<br><br>I'll present my case as to why
transitions are helpful conveying meaning and spatial
awareness.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="36">Jakub Steiner</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>6-the_inbetweens__why_transitions_matter</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle /><title>The
Inbetweens — why transitions matter.</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="dc201b85-f588-533c-b7c2-4498bc53e9dc" id="11"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>Flatpak is a tool providing new and easy way how to
distribute desktop applications. While it is pretty well supported in Gnome, we in KDE have been trying to
catch up and offer same experience. In this talk, Jan Grulich will share with you what KDE has been lately up
to and what has been accomplished during last year. <br><br> Martin Bříza will also cover how we
advanced with how well are Qt applications integrated into the overall GNOME experience.
<br><br> Topics covered will include
the state of the Adwaita and Highcontrast themes, new QGnomePlatform (abstract platform theme backend for
GNOME) features and Wayland
support.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>14:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="37">Jan Grulich</person><person id="38">Martin
Bříza</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>11-flatpak_and_kde_and_the_state_of_qt_integration_in_gnome</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Flatpak and KDE, and the state of Qt integration in GNOME</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="adbb36c1-257e-5bc9-81a8-9cd5077e031b" id="16"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>Animations are the future of interface design. They
enable developers to make interfaces more understandable by offloading processes from the user's brain to the
screen. However, in many cases animations are simply adde
d as transitions between independently designed screens. This can result in animations contradicting each
other spatially. I co-wrote an article about why this is a problem [1] and outlined a solution: Designing
semantic components which change over time, and then using these to compose
interfaces.<br><br>Even though the industry seems to largely agree that this is the way forward,
there are very few interfaces implementing these ideas. I believe the main reason for this is that the
current generation of layout technologies is built for static layouts with strict hierarchies. This makes it
prohibitively difficult to build interfaces where components move fluidly between different
states.<br><br>I will show some interface prototypes I built and explain why they were so
difficult to implement with current technology. Finally, I will outline some ideas for a better layout API,
to make building awesome, fluid interfaces from the future more feasible.<b
r><br>[1]
https://alistapart.com/article/motion-with-meaning-semantic-animation-in-interface-design</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="39">Tobias Bernard</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>16-building_interfaces_from_the_future</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>Building
interfaces from the future</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="b5162e55-01c1-5dd8-8f17-b78ff5e85d25" id="20"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>I'm Jonathan Kang, a GNOME hacker from China. I
currently maintain Logs, and contribute to other projects. My copresenter is Chingkai Chu who is a QA
engineer at SUSE and he has been focused on Gnome testing and openQA for two
years.<br><br>We'll talk about how currently GNOME applications are tested using differ
ent technologies. And then introduce the approach of using openQA to test GNOME
applications.<br><br>Our talk can be divided into three parts:<br>1. Why should we do
quality assurance<br> - We'll talk about this from a GNOME hacker and a GNOME QA tester's
view.<br><br>2. The current technologies used in GNOME projects for testing<br> - It's
mainly about the methods GNOME community currently uses to do the testing, like dogtail, glib unit test,
gnome continuous and etc.<br><br>3. Introduce what I did with openQA for testing my maintained
project and discuss the possibility of using it for other projects<br> - openQA features overview
and how we use it in SLE Desktop team<br> - Gnome automation testing approach using
openQA</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="40">Jonathan Kang</person><person id="41">Chingkai Chu</person
</persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>20-robustness_of_gnome</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>Robustness of
GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="8db7a86f-7cdc-5710-a270-b84b04f81984"
id="64"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>GTK+4 is getting more generic and
simple, and less X11-centric. This talk will cover what this means for GtkWidget development, and the main
differences with
GTK+3.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="21">Carlos Garnacho</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>64-ding_dong_gdkwindow_is_dead</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle /><title>Ding dong,
GdkWindow is dead</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="3a961a4e-1d46-597f-b7b1-397ad89
b325a" id="68"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>The move towards Wayland
and container-isolated application deployment brings a range of security benefits. But broad isolation isn't
enough - we still need fine-grained control over access to resources, otherwise it's still practical for a
single compromised application to leak significant quantities of personal data.<br><br>This
presentation will examine existing application isolation mechanisms and identify cases where they fall short.
It will then go on to cover existing kernel technologies that allow us to provide even stronger restrictions
and control, and how it's possible for us to build environments that provide high levels of security without
forcing users to give up the freedom to run whatever software they
want.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="42">Matthew Garrett</person></persons><record
ing><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>68-building_a_secure_desktop_with_gnome_technologies</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Building a secure desktop with GNOME technologies</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="41452287-6fc1-595a-a59a-12bd117de029" id="109"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:00:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and discussion panels to be
submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting edge developments or
anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can propose talks from 11.00,
and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At 15.30, the talk with the most
votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to b
e announced</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>109-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #6</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="cc7afd5b-dda6-5302-a41d-918795221100" id="111"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:20:00+02:00</date><description>20 minute slots for talks and discussion panels to be
submitted and selected by attendees on-site. This is your chance to present cutting edge developments or
anything that did not make it into the normal schedule.<br><br>You can propose talks from 11.00,
and other attendees will add a vote to the ones that they would like to see. At 15.30, the talk with the most
votes will be selected and scheduled, so keep an eye on schedule
board!</description><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">to be announced</person></persons><rec
ording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>111-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Open talk #8</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event guid="f33e9765-bd8d-55a8-a166-a3acce71554d"
id="211"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T09:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>211-venue_opens</slug><start>09:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue opens</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="1cf98b5b-9980-5b3d-a84e-c57c4e90dd64"
id="212"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T11:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</ro
om><slug>212-break</slug><start>11:00</start><subtitle /><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event
guid="ff50c8ad-efb4-50c3-b6b0-a9bc834a8797" id="213"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T13:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>01:00</duration><end>14:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>213-lunch</slug><start>13:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Lunch</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="da0daac0-3475-583a-9ffa-7e0ed82aa044"
id="214"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T15:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>16:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>214-break</slug><start>15:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="52bf8eb3-8601-50bb-8c9d-437e91dcdfbf" id="215"
<attachments /><date>2017-07-30T18:15:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:45</duration><end>19:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>215-venue_closes</slug><start>18:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue closes</title><track /><type /></event></room></day></schedule>
\ No newline at end of file
+<schedule><version>1.0</version><conference><acronym>GUADEC2017</acronym><city>Manchester,
UK</city><day_change>00:00</day_change><days>3</days><end>2017-07-30</end><start>2017-07-28</start><timeslot_duration>00:15</timeslot_duration><title>GUADEC
2017</title><venue>Manchester Metropolitan University</venue></conference><day date="2017-07-28"
end="2017-07-28T19:00:00+02:00" index="1" start="2017-07-28T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Turing - G29"><event
guid="fb5e3081-c1f5-5657-9abb-b2ce8a0c4008" id="7"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>Another yearly update on what Builder can do for you,
what has been added, and how your contribution workflow can be simplified.<br><br>Some topics
include:<br><br> - Making your development setup quick & easy w/ Flatpak<br> -
Profiling your project to find performance issues<br> - New build systems and integration points for
plugin authors<br> - Debugging your project&
lt;br> - How to quickly start contributing to an existing
project</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="1">Christian Hergert</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>7-state_of_the_builder</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>State of the
Builder</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="14127f56-48e5-590d-a9f7-bd236b7fbf79"
id="17"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>The web browser is indisputably the
single most important component of any operating system, and GNOME is no exception. Cross-platform browsers
like Firefox and Google Chrome work well everywhere, but at the expense of platform integration.
Cross-platform browsers cannot deliver a well-integrated user experience comparable to the Microsoft Edge or
Safari web browsers. If you haven't used one of thes
e two browsers recently, you might not even realize what you're missing on Linux. GNOME Web is the only
browser that can seriously hope to provide comparable desktop integration and user experience, but it suffers
from lack of users and contributors. Distributions that ship GNOME with Firefox, as well as GNOME
contributors that primarily use other browsers, are seriously harming our effort to improve GNOME Web. To
improve quality, we need all GNOME hands on deck to test regular daily usage of GNOME Web, report bugs, and
attract new users and
contributors.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="2">Michael Catanzaro</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>17-please_use_gnome_web</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>Please Use GNOME
Web</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="b34fba3d-270e-53e2-b
533-5fd29e3eb0de" id="29"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>Flatpak is an
application distribution and runtime system that brings sandboxed linux desktop apps to the masses.
<br><br>This talk will give a status update of the flatpak project and what has happened in this
year. It will also talk about new and interesting things happening in the echosystem around flatpak and where
we're going in the
future.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="3">Alexander Larsson</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>29-flatpak_status_update_and_future_plans</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Flatpak status update and future plans</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="fd063a2c-89c2-526a-ad12-d6d8fb2d3640" id="40"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T14:45:00+02:00</
date><description>In the last months Endless achieved another milestone to allow their users to transition
to learners. A new feature has been developed that let's the user peek at the code that runs an application,
modify it and run the new version of that application. A very challenging series of steps has been
simplified: the app source will be located and downloaded automatically, then displayed in GNOME Builder and
from there it can be explored, modified and run.<br><br>The Feature spawns across three core
GNOME technologies: the EOS Shell (derivative of the GNOME Shell), Flatpak and GNOME
Builder.<br><br>The authors aim is that this talk is suitable for a broad audience, hoping to
find the right balance between demonstrating the user interaction, talking about design decisions and giving
an technical overview of the components
involved.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><pers
on id="4">Simon Schampijer</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>40-seamless_integration_to_hack_desktop_applications</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Seamless integration to hack desktop applications</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="6e23ad85-3cf8-516f-804a-97cee4afb231" id="59"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>Linux distributions have been traditionally put together
from individual packages. In case of Fedora it's RPM packages. They have served us well, but they also have a
number of shortcomings: with small individual components the testing matrix explodes when we have to consider
different package versions, and upgrading such systems is often irreversable.<br><br>In this talk
I will lay out a plan how we are going to put together an atomic base system in Fedora Workstation with
flatpaks for individual applicat
ions. I will demo the latest progress we've made and show a great many
screenshots.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="5">Kalev Lember</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>59-atomic_workstation</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle /><title>Atomic
Workstation</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="3a9a1c99-8dd6-5b0e-bcf7-1c0c5df63c00"
id="102"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T17:15:00+02:00</date><description>Lightning talks of Google Summer
of Code and Outreachy
interns</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>18:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="6">GSoC and Outreachy Interns</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>102-interns_lightning_talks</slug><start>17:15</start><subt
itle /><title>Interns lightning talks</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="436e87eb-2b8e-52c2-95d1-48763a7b07f1" id="104"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:00:00+02:00</date><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="7">Richard Brown</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>104-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>Rolling Releases – The One
True Way</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="bbfbd734-10aa-5f7a-8bb3-4255d7949690"
id="106"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:20:00+02:00</date><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="8">Stephen Pearce</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>106-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><su
btitle /><title>Progressive web apps: an opportunity for GNOME</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="87708b2d-cf10-5ff2-81d9-2545bb2fb198" id="112"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>Karen’s keynote will take a broad look at ethics in
technology, a topic that is fundamental to many of those involved in GNOME and something that becomes ever
more relevant as technology and society
develop.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>14:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="9">Karen Sandler</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>112-keynote_the_battle_over_our_technology</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Keynote: The Battle Over Our Technology</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="6889f591-0803-5f0e-9a14-ce5cbaf806fe" id="113"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T10:00:00+02:00</date><descrip
tion /><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person
id="10">GUADEC Team</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>113-conference_opening</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle /><title>Conference
opening</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="363bdbee-1372-5ff6-9c7f-56f62d93dbb4"
id="200"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T09:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>200-registration</slug><start>09:30</start><subtitle /><title>Registration</title><track
/><type /></event></room><room name="Hopper - G44"><event guid="21cd49d0-45c8-5a83-8c03-8b9a785627aa"
id="8"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>Due to the amount of
bugs in several GNU/Linux projects such as GNOME or Fedora, good volunteers and new contributors are crucial
to fix them and make the projects better. <br>I emphasized the phrase good volunteers and new good
contributors because is not only to have a positive willing to do things here.<br>Many other factors
besides the knowledge of the project are fundamental, like interaction, usability, English skills, GNOME
style in programming and following the pattern of designing.<br>In my local community I have
encountered many pros and cons during almost six years of promoting the Fedora and GNOME projects in
universities and social events. During my talk I will share those different experiences and the
vulnerabilities and improvements I faced in the
way.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="11">Julita Inca</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout
</recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>8-different_ways_of_outreaching_newcomers</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Different ways of outreaching newcomers</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="f25ee534-b1a2-513e-b8cc-526f695d0153" id="28"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T14:45:00+02:00</date><description>We find ourselves in a world where there are an
increasing number of ecosystems of computing devices and appliances that (try to) work seamlessly together
to allow people to listen and watch what they want, when, where and how they want to in their homes -- on
their TVs, tablets, through multi-room speakers, and so on.<br><br>We've made some headway in
enabling these in GNOME -- via the Sharing panel, and the massive amount of plumbing underneath it -- but
there is a huge gap between what we have, and where I think we need to be.<br><br>So this talk
is in three parts:<br><br>1. Where we are -- both in terms o
f the user experience (Sharing) and the software stack (Rygel, GUPnP, PulseAudio,
GStreamer)<br><br>2. Where I'd like us to be -- what kinds of connectivity do we want to enable?
Is it possible to do this with commodity hardware?<br><br>and<br><br>3. How we can
get there -- existing pieces to build on top of, missing pieces of the stack to add, and tying it together in
a way users can "get"</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="12">Arun Raghavan</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>28-dreaming_of_a_better_home_media_experience</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Dreaming of a better home media experience</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="1b0f7a57-4f8e-5897-855a-a1e0fe4a8de5" id="43"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T11:30:00+02:00</date><description
The Endless OS has always been a bit different from regular Linux distros in that it offers an immutable
system managed by OSTree and thus has always had an alternative way of installing applications.<br>It
is also one of the first operating systems using Flatpak as the main way of managing applications by the
user.<br><br>In this talk I will introduce the evolution of the application story in the
Endless OS, focusing on the adoption of Flatpak applications and the changes to GNOME Software to integrate
it better with the EOS desktop and to improve the UX for Endless’ users.<br><br>I will also
talk about the problems of shipping apps in a world of very unreliable or nonexistent internet connection
and the solutions we implemented to give the best experiences to our users. This talk should be interesting
not only for those who want to know more about application management in EOS but also for those who want to
know more about how GNOME Softwar
e works and the and possibilities it offers with its plugins
system.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="13">Joaquim Rocha</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>43-limited_connectivity_endless_apps</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle /><title>Limited
connectivity, Endless apps!</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="bb353abf-cc6c-515a-ae06-d5bfffcae654" id="48"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>The newcomer guide is made for newcomers to get started
with GNOME development. Bastian Ilso and Carlos Soriano will tell the story of how the newcomer experience
changed in the past year and how that had a big impact on newcomer contributions, developer workflow and the
image of the GNOME community.<br>At the end of the talk we will have an open debate about what the
next steps should be to improve the experience. What do you think newcomers are looking for? What should
the ideal workflow be?</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="14">Carlos Soriano</person><person id="15">Bastian
Ilsø</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>48-newcomer_genesis_evolution</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>Newcomer Genesis
Evolution</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="607c135b-31e8-5b66-ab0e-59f517e81290"
id="72"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>This year, GNOME turns 20. Over the
course of its history, the project has pioneered new ways of working and has set out a powerful mission for
itself: from championing usability and accessibility, to establishing the six month release cycle, GNOME has
been at the forefront of Free Software d
evelopment. However, there are also risks for a project that has been running this long: collective
knowledge can be forgotten, and it is easy to lose touch with the beliefs that give a project
purpose.<br><br>In this talk, I'll ask the question: what is it that defines the GNOME project?
In attempting to provide my own answer, I'll describe the principles that I think make GNOME so important.
I'll also recount stories from GNOME's history, and in so doing make a case for what constitutes the
project's folklore. Finally, I'll ask the question: how do we ensure that, as GNOME looks to the future, the
project continues to nurture these
traditions?</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="16">Allan Day</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>72-the_gnome_way</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>The G
NOME Way</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="01e8a7f0-684c-55b0-8b1c-930962a49729"
id="105"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:00:00+02:00</date><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="17">Jorge Garcia</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>105-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>Building a Flatpak based app
store</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="46647784-a003-5e87-9fcf-881d1c42efb6"
id="107"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T16:20:00+02:00</date><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="18">Richard Hughes</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>107-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Payments and do
nations in GNOME Software</title><track /><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event
guid="fd199473-c615-5f85-9975-575ebe87a07a" id="201"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-28T11:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>201-break</slug><start>11:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="d6b06dee-7e6c-5f25-87fb-3bc31998f997"
id="202"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T13:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>01:00</duration><end>14:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>202-lunch</slug><start>13:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Lunch</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="b8d33ab3-733c-5dd3-9921-24af014cac4f"
id="203"><att
achments /><date>2017-07-28T15:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>16:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>203-break</slug><start>15:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="abe4e817-53ef-5220-9c78-b15253d0ebc1"
id="204"><attachments /><date>2017-07-28T18:15:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:45</duration><end>19:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>204-venue_closes</slug><start>18:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue closes</title><track /><type /></event></room></day><day date="2017-07-29"
end="2017-07-29T19:00:00+02:00" index="2" start="2017-07-29T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Turing - G29"><event
guid="d4776b28-450d-5c72-bbcd-16b813808106" id="5"><attachments />
<date>2017-07-29T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>I have been working on replacing the C code in librsvg,
GNOME's SVG rendering library, with Rust. Rust is one of the few high-level languages that actually
generates object code, which in turn can be linked into compiled C code.<br><br>What started as
an experiment in replacing gnarly C code with clean Rust code, eventually turned into a full porting effort.
Librsvg's public API/ABI remain the same as before, and only the internals have Rust code in them. The
result is a much safer library with trustworthy code. Not only is the code safe by Rust's nature; it now has
a bunch of unit tests that would have been very cumbersome to write before.<br><br>This talk will
explore:<br><br>* Brief intro to Rust's benefits and philosophy.<br><br>* Tips for
replacing C code with Rust.<br><br>* Refactorings that are needed in C to replace it with
Rust.<br><br>* Ref
actorings that are possible once Rust is in place.<br><br>* Going from a codebase with zero unit
tests to one that has a bunch of tests!<br><br>* Having a mixture of C and Rust code for certain
implementation patterns.<br><br>* Replacing scary C parsers with safe Rust
parsers.<br><br>* How Rust clarified my thinking.<br><br>* Can distros ship
this?<br><br>* Should we replace GNOME library code with Rust, in
general?</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="19">Federico Mena Quintero</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>5-replacing_c_library_code_with_rust_what_i_learned</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Replacing C library code with Rust: what I learned</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="3e32c3e2-6bdb-5afa-be55-9b
15f35398c8" id="14"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T15:00:00+02:00</date><description>In this talk, I'll
have a look at some of the challenges that GNOME faces at the moment, a brief look into the future, and how
we can meet those head on and
thrive!</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="20">Neil McGovern</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>14-gnome_to_2020_and_beyond</slug><start>15:00</start><subtitle /><title>GNOME to 2020 and
beyond</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="6cf0e9df-438b-5b7d-907b-50f4b6f98237"
id="15"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>Since 2012, a service in the GNOME
infrastructure has been constantly building GNOME modules, committing the result to Ostree, and running
automated tests on the whole OS. From a single Git commit to a full blown v
irtual machine in a matter of minutes. This service is called GNOME Continuous, our own continuous
integration and delivery pipeline.<br><br>Continuous has been the major driver to improve the
quality of the whole GNOME project: for developers, by building their work; for designers, by providing a
bootable VM to perform design iteration and QA; to newcomers, by ensuring that tools like jhbuild would be
more reliable; to distributors and OSVs, who could ensure their products would be based on a reliable set of
components.<br><br>In this presentation we will talk about how Continuous came to be, thanks to
the work of Colin Walters; how it works; what are the goals of a CI/CD pipeline like Continuous; and where do
we go from here.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="21">Emmanuele Bassi</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></record
ing><room>Turing - G29</room><slug>15-continuous_past_present_and_future</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Continuous: Past, Present, and Future</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="bdff2d9f-cbd4-5bf3-8d87-f29e05f6aa61" id="50"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>With the new contribution workflow enabled by GNOME
Builder, it is now trivially easy for newcomers to clone a project, build it, and hack on
it.<br><br>This talk is about how you can use Meson's subprojects and wrapdb to have a very
similar experience on any operating system with just Meson and git.<br><br>At the same time, this
feature is also distro-friendly since all this machinery can be turned off with a single option, telling
Meson to only use dependencies provided by the
system.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="22">Nirbheek Chauhan</person></per
sons><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>50-building_your_gnome_app_anywhere_with_meson</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Building your GNOME app anywhere with Meson</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="5d769bed-f310-5afd-a9d5-2b7c1556d5a0" id="60"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>Happy Birthday GNOME! Ever wonder why the project is the
way it is? The GNOME project has had a long and exciting ride to this point. I'll go through some of the
early moments of the project that led us to the desktop that we know and love
today.</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>15:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="23">Jonathan Blandford</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>60-the_history_of_gnome</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle /><
title>The History of GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="9ec3f1f0-0feb-548e-833e-5c38721764c0" id="63"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>Shell present and near
future.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="24">Carlos Garnacho</person><person id="25">Florian
Müllner</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>63-muttergnomeshell_state_of_the_union</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Mutter/gnome-shell state of the union</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="cae033cb-4acd-5194-895c-1cd1dfb66e7c" id="100"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T16:00:00+02:00</date><description>The annual general meeting of the GNOME Foundation: team
reports</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>17:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><pe
rson id="26">GNOME Board</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>100-gnome_foundation_agm_part_1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>GNOME Foundation
AGM (part 1)</title><track /><type>meeting</type></event><event guid="e92b8310-2623-54c4-be20-ce7391564083"
id="101"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T17:15:00+02:00</date><description>The annual general meeting of the
GNOME Foundation: Q&A with the
board.</description><duration>01:00</duration><end>18:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="26">GNOME Board</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>101-gnome_foundation_agm_part_2</slug><start>17:15</start><subtitle /><title>GNOME Foundation
AGM (part 2)</title><track /><type>meeting</type></event><event guid="05eb0f22-c9af-5862-aae8-4bb34772e1e0"
id="209"><attachments /><d
ate>2017-07-29T17:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:15</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>209-group_photo</slug><start>17:00</start><subtitle /><title>Group photo</title><track
/><type /></event></room><room name="Hopper - G44"><event guid="526ab1a5-9783-528c-9208-6ab1c1d7a07d"
id="31"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>Matrix.org is a relatively new open
standard for decentralised realtime communication - providing an open global network (including end-to-end
encryption) that links together communication silos such as Slack, IRC, Gitter, Telegram, XMPP etc. Matrix
has gained some popularity in the GNOME developer community since GIMPNet was bridged into the wider Matrix
ecosystem in March (https://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2017-March/msg00033.html), and
meanwhile Matrix's
goals of entirely open source and democratised communication are quite aligned with the ethos of the GNOME
project.<br><br>This talk will be a formal introduction and demonstration of the Matrix
ecosystem, its APIs and spec, its clients/servers/bridges/bots, its end-to-end encryption, its goals and its
current status, as given by the project
lead.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="27">Matthew Hodgson</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>31-decentralised_open_communication_with_matrixorg</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Decentralised open communication with Matrix.org</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="c27e346f-5ef5-5845-aad6-f741a15a36a9" id="41"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>Emeus is a constraint-based layout manager and contai
ner widget for GTK+.<br><br>Emeus allows programmers and designers to describe the UI in a way
that can be more natural from the UI building perspective, more expressive and efficient than stacking boxes
inside boxes.<br><br>At Endless we have been developing Emeus to provide richer visual
experiences in our apps and better tools for engineers and designers to work
together.<br><br>Here's what you'll see in this talk:<br><br>* A new way of creating
rich layouts for your GTK+ app.<br>* A display of layouts and widgets that we created at
Endless.<br>* How it brings programmers and designers
together.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="28">Martin Abente Lahaye</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>41-fantastic_layouts_and_where_to_find_them</slug><start
10:00</start><subtitle /><title>Fantastic Layouts And Where To Find Them</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="5068c0d6-7857-510f-9a2b-373c560b519b" id="62"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>Tracker has become a foundation for many core apps. It
has provided a common metadata store for applications to share, making all of the data a giant
interconnected graph.<br><br>However, times change. There's now initiatives like flatpak that
make this interconnected graph more accessory, or even not desirable. This talk will cover the plans to
make Tracker a good citizen in the sandboxing world, and what this means for
applications.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="24">Carlos Garnacho</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>62-tracker__present_and_future</slug
<start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>Tracker - present and future</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="eaaf9612-272e-59df-81c0-406d441e9376" id="65"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>Come and hear about the latest developments in
LibreOffice and see how we continue to make the Linux Desktop and Free Software ever more useful for
business users.<br><br>Get an update on the awesome work from Caolan polishing our gtk3 and
wayland support. Checkout the latest new features in the LibreOfficeKit API - ripe for deeper use in GNOME
Documents - and the potential for testing out innovative new GNOME editors here. See LibreOffice Online -
inspired by gtk+/broadway - and what it can do<br>for you.<br><br>Also catch random
thoughts and demos on whatever seems
apposite.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="29">Michael Meeks</pers
on></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>65-libreoffice_and_gnome</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>LibreOffice and
GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event
guid="a74eebdc-899a-579d-a84f-ba8d18667403" id="205"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-29T09:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>205-venue_opens</slug><start>09:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue opens</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="4049ad77-c1eb-5e0a-b4c2-ca3c0de54f10"
id="206"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T11:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout
</recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>206-break</slug><start>11:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="cdffc551-86dc-5f92-8d61-efe3fc4276fa"
id="207"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T13:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>01:00</duration><end>14:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>207-lunch</slug><start>13:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Lunch</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="53f0a9ac-99b8-5eb9-9fa3-3e914a2a89c7"
id="208"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T15:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>16:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>208-break</slug><start>15:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="0e481de3-2119-
5f57-8d28-87c17229c2dd" id="210"><attachments /><date>2017-07-29T18:15:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:45</duration><end>19:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>210-venue_closes</slug><start>18:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue closes</title><track /><type /></event></room></day><day date="2017-07-30"
end="2017-07-30T19:00:00+02:00" index="3" start="2017-07-30T09:30:00+02:00"><room name="Turing - G29"><event
guid="24652dae-8d39-5a73-a8e5-aaddd983e107" id="22"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:30:00+02:00</date><description>Various GNOME modules have been building on Coverity
Scan for the last year. Has it been finding legitimate bugs, or ones which people are almost never going to
hit? What’s the best way to use static analysis? Why should developers care?<br><br>Warning: This
talk will contain Jenkins and graphs.</description><
duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person
id="30">Philip Withnall</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>22-whats_coverity_static_analysis_ever_done_for_us</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle
/><title>What’s Coverity static analysis ever done for us?</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="c3cc55a3-5b08-5358-99f1-666bd7c54501" id="23"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>Cooking and recipes is not a new topic for the GNOME
community.<br>All the way back to 2007, the idea of a GNOME cook book was already around
(https://wiki.gnome.org/GnomeCookbook). For one reason or another, we never quite got there - but the idea
has stuck around, and after Guadec last year, the two of us got together to finally make GNOME recipes a
reality.<br><br>Our talk will cover the original design
goals and the evolution of the design from paper mock-ups and ideas, to refining a raw prototype and to the
complete application that we have to today. We will touch on the interaction between design and development
and how you can be successful in this even when you have to bridge a 7 hour time
differential.<br><br>We will take a look ahead at whats coming in 3.26, and how the original
design goals are evolving and expanding as we build out the application.<br> <br>On the technical
side, we will explore some of the challenges and lessons learned during the development of recipes, and we
will explain how writing this application was useful for developing and refining new technologies such as
sandboxes, portals and new build systems. There may be an aside about portability.<br><br>Of
course, there will be a demo of
recipes.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="
31">Matthias Clasen</person><person id="32">Emel Elvin Yildiz</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>23-recipes__lessons_learned_from_creating_a_new_app</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Recipes - Lessons learned from creating a new app</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="c6ee3b58-3a6e-5330-9d4f-9739b72a2c95" id="26"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>GNOME 3.24 brought a lot of improvements in GJS, the
Javascript language bindings for GNOME, that power GNOME Shell, Polari, GNOME Documents, and many other
apps.<br><br>We moved to a more modern version of the Javascript engine. We gained support for a
lot of cool language features that take some of the rough edges off of Javascript's shady reputation. For
GNOME 3.26 we'll continue this modernizing process, and start improving the developer experience in GJS as
well.<b
r><br>Here's what you'll see in this talk:<br>- Cool stuff you never knew you could do in
GJS!<br>- How to modernize your app with ES6 features!<br>- Debugging, documentation, and other
developer tools!<br>- Sneak peek of what's to come in 3.26 and how you can
help!</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="33">Philip Chimento</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>26-modern_javascript_in_gnome</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle /><title>Modern Javascript
in GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="64fd49fb-3b1e-56cd-b85e-78c3389e6dce"
id="34"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T14:45:00+02:00</date><description>In the beginning there was a
keyboard. Then came the mouse. Then the touchpad, the mouse wheel, the trackpoint, the graphics tablet, the
joystick, the touchscr
een, the touchpad without buttons but with pressure, the pen tablet with touch, the joysticks with
touchpads, the touchpad with trackpoints, the touch-capable mouse, gestures, ... it all got rather
complicated.<br><br>Over the last few years, we had a massive revamp of the input stack on our
desktops. This talk is a tour starting with lowest levels of contemporary input devices and their common
features and device types, going up through the intermediate levels where we add a lot of the software
features (like buttons on a touchpad) to the new bits and pieces we're adding to X and Wayland to support
these features all the way to the
application.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="34">Peter Hutterer</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>34-on_mice_touchpads_and_other_rodents</slug><start>14:45</sta
rt><subtitle /><title>On mice, touchpads and other rodents</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="5b5c389e-170b-5bcf-9e4d-74f8ff49c677" id="38"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>In this talk, I will start by outlining our motivations
behind creating this new meta build system, based both on the emergence of new distribution models and also
lessons learned from existing meta build system implementations.<br><br>Then we will briefly
explore the abstract and rather simple design of BuildStream: A format and engine for the modeling and
processing of pipelines composed of elements which perform mutations on filesystem data from inside an
isolated sandbox environment.<br><br>Finally we will explore the various use cases of building
GNOME modules and outline how we intend to apply this new technology to improve the GNOME Developer
experience in various ways.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end
<language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person id="35">Tristan Van
Berkom</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>38-gnome_build_strategies_and_buildstream</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle
/><title>GNOME Build Strategies and BuildStream</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="6d2e7e92-c56f-5358-be16-4c22e07f2daf" id="44"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>In this talk we will go trough most of the not so
known features of Glade and introduce a refreshed UI which will improve the regular design workflow by
replacing the good old tool palette.<br><br>The walk trough will include:<br> - creating
custom composite widgets<br> - a catalog to add support for them<br> - JavaScript objects in
Glade<br><br>As a bonus, I might, just might, show my crazy idea to rewrite Glade from scratch
for Gtk4, just
so that we can discuss it over some
beers!</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="36">Juan Pablo Ugarte</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>44-how_to_get_better_mileage_out_of_glade</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle /><title>How to
get better mileage out of Glade</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="cd873c69-aae6-5edd-b537-cad7fbed6d67" id="52"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>I am a co-founder and technical lead of Ubuntu GNOME,
with our goal to bring a pure GNOME experience to Ubuntu some might wonder where that might be heading given
the recently annouced decision for Canonical to drop Unity and switch to GNOME. This will bring a new set of
challenges for the Ubuntu GNOME team, while our distro will not likely exist as a seperate entity and we will
merge d
evelopment resources with the Canonical desktop team, we will remain as a community team to avoid the
possible distinction between community and Canonical may getting blurred.<br><br>I will open my
talk with a brief history of the Ubuntu GNOME project, why we started it and what our goals were. We started
the project with goal of bring pure gnome-shell to Ubuntu. At the time GNOME 3 was incredibly broken on both
Ubuntu and Debian to the the point of being unusable. We managed to get things into really good shape over
the years but there have been challenges, mostly relating to the co-existence with Unity, and having to
maintain large patch delta’s to work with Unity also.<br><br>Then comes the exciting stuff what
is the future of GNOME on Ubuntu, where does the Ubuntu GNOME team stand in the future? Canonical are already
showing some resistance towards core components of the GNOME stack, for example things like tracker and gdm.
What part will Ubuntu
GNOME play in pushing our visions into the core Ubuntu Future GNOME desktop? I can’t be incredibly specific
on this at this point we are still in discussions with Canonical teams at this stage, but all should be clear
by GUADEC. This should fill the bulk of my talk, I see exciting oppurtunities ahead and some more challenges
going forward before we can get Canonical aligned with GNOME. I will discuss these in detail during my
talk.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>14:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="37">Tim Lunn</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>52-bringing_gnome_home_to_ubuntu</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle /><title>Bringing GNOME
home to Ubuntu</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="343b5c9d-c4fa-5aa4-8563-1e271c788435"
id="103"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T17:15:00+02:00</date><description>Fast-paced and focus
ed talks on any and all subjects. All talks will be subject to a strict time limit of 5 minutes on stage
(including setup). Slides are welcome, but not compulsory.<br><br>You will be able to sign up for
a lightning talk slot from 11.00AM on Sunday 29th on a signup sheet at the info desk. Talks will be accepted
on a first come, first serve
basis.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>18:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons /><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>103-lightning_talks</slug><start>17:15</start><subtitle /><title>Lightning
talks</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="93bb2614-9440-5ad3-b7f4-95aa88a9629a"
id="108"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:00:00+02:00</date><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="14">Carlos Soriano</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</licen
se><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>108-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>GitLab</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="9482c5aa-b3ef-5cc5-bfdc-ffef6d4b7045" id="110"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:20:00+02:00</date><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="38">Julian Atanasoae</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>110-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Microsoft <3
Linux</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="be6d24b5-d3b6-5b8b-afa1-40edae3161c7"
id="114"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T18:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:15</duration><end>18:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons><person
id="10">GUADEC Team</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA 4.0</license><optout>fal
se</optout></recording><room>Turing -
G29</room><slug>114-conference_closing</slug><start>18:00</start><subtitle /><title>Conference
closing</title><track /><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Hopper - G44"><event
guid="8e9c9810-06ed-5b96-af10-68729ba32773" id="1"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T14:45:00+02:00</date><description>Containerised Application technologies like AppImage,
Snappy and Flatpak promise a brave new world for Linux applications, free from the worries of shared
libraries and dependency issues. Just one problem, this is a road long travelled before, such as in the
application dark ages of Win32 applications and DLLs. And it worked out so wonderfully there... Do we risk a
future where, like the resurrected dinosaurs of Jurassic Park, this family of applications will break their
containment and start eating our users? This session will try to present a balanced argument about the
situation, frankly discussing the benefits promised by these technologi
es, but highlighting the very real issues and risks their widespread adoption could, and in some cases are,
already bringing to the table.<br><br>The talk with cover the promised benefits of application
containers, such as AppImage, Snappy and Flatpak. It will detail the empowerment of developers who use the
technologies, the ability for upstream projects to have a much closer role in delivering their software, and
the benefits that brings to both the upstream projects and their users. But as a counter to those benefits,
the session will detail some of the risks and responsibilities that come with that technology. The
complexities of library integration, the risk of introducing new forms of dependency issues, and the
transference of responsibility for those issues, plus security, away from the current Distributions
delivering upstream projects towards those upstream projects directly. As a conclusion, the session will
present some suggestions to upstream projects
adopting these technologies to start them down the road of accepting those responsibilities directly, or
working more closely with existing Distribution projects to share the burdens these technologies now
provide.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>15:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="7">Richard Brown</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>1-resurrecting_dinosaurs_what_can_possibly_go_wrong</slug><start>14:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Resurrecting dinosaurs, what can possibly go wrong</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="23c23699-fdc5-5e08-aa98-ddc1aac45dae" id="6"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:00:00+02:00</date><description>After spending considerable amount of time prototyping
designs for GNOME, over and over again I've met with resistance to transitions as being a "waste of CPU/GPU
time" and not enjoying a wide acceptan
ce among developers.<br><br>I'll present my case as to why transitions are helpful conveying
meaning and spatial
awareness.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="39">Jakub Steiner</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>6-the_inbetweens__why_transitions_matter</slug><start>10:00</start><subtitle /><title>The
Inbetweens — why transitions matter.</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="dc201b85-f588-533c-b7c2-4498bc53e9dc" id="11"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T14:00:00+02:00</date><description>Flatpak is a tool providing new and easy way how to
distribute desktop applications. While it is pretty well supported in Gnome, we in KDE have been trying to
catch up and offer same experience. In this talk, Jan Grulich will share with you what KDE has been lately up
to and what has been accompli
shed during last year. <br><br> Martin Bříza will also cover how we advanced with how well are
Qt applications integrated into the overall GNOME experience. <br><br> Topics covered will
include the state of the Adwaita and Highcontrast themes, new QGnomePlatform (abstract platform theme backend
for GNOME) features and Wayland
support.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>14:45</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="40">Jan Grulich</person><person id="41">Martin
Bříza</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>11-flatpak_and_kde_and_the_state_of_qt_integration_in_gnome</slug><start>14:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Flatpak and KDE, and the state of Qt integration in GNOME</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event><event guid="adbb36c1-257e-5bc9-81a8-9cd5077e031b" id="16"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T10:30:00+02:00</date><descriptio
n>Animations are the future of interface design. They enable developers to make interfaces more
understandable by offloading processes from the user's brain to the screen. However, in many cases animations
are simply added as transitions between independently designed screens. This can result in animations
contradicting each other spatially. I co-wrote an article about why this is a problem [1] and outlined a
solution: Designing semantic components which change over time, and then using these to compose
interfaces.<br><br>Even though the industry seems to largely agree that this is the way forward,
there are very few interfaces implementing these ideas. I believe the main reason for this is that the
current generation of layout technologies is built for static layouts with strict hierarchies. This makes it
prohibitively difficult to build interfaces where components move fluidly between different
states.<br><br>I will show some interface prototypes I
built and explain why they were so difficult to implement with current technology. Finally, I will outline
some ideas for a better layout API, to make building awesome, fluid interfaces from the future more
feasible.<br><br>[1]
https://alistapart.com/article/motion-with-meaning-semantic-animation-in-interface-design</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:00</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="42">Tobias Bernard</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>16-building_interfaces_from_the_future</slug><start>10:30</start><subtitle /><title>Building
interfaces from the future</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="b5162e55-01c1-5dd8-8f17-b78ff5e85d25" id="20"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T12:15:00+02:00</date><description>I'm Jonathan Kang, a GNOME hacker from China. I
currently maintain Logs, and contribute to other projects. My co
presenter is Chingkai Chu who is a QA engineer at SUSE and he has been focused on Gnome testing and
openQA for two years.<br><br>We'll talk about how currently GNOME applications are tested using
different technologies. And then introduce the approach of using openQA to test GNOME
applications.<br><br>Our talk can be divided into three parts:<br>1. Why should we do
quality assurance<br> - We'll talk about this from a GNOME hacker and a GNOME QA tester's
view.<br><br>2. The current technologies used in GNOME projects for testing<br> - It's
mainly about the methods GNOME community currently uses to do the testing, like dogtail, glib unit test,
gnome continuous and etc.<br><br>3. Introduce what I did with openQA for testing my maintained
project and discuss the possibility of using it for other projects<br> - openQA features overview
and how we use it in SLE Desktop team<br> - Gnome
automation testing approach using
openQA</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>13:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="43">Jonathan Kang</person><person id="44">Chingkai
Chu</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>20-robustness_of_gnome</slug><start>12:15</start><subtitle /><title>Robustness of
GNOME</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event guid="8db7a86f-7cdc-5710-a270-b84b04f81984"
id="64"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T16:45:00+02:00</date><description>GTK+4 is getting more generic and
simple, and less X11-centric. This talk will cover what this means for GtkWidget development, and the main
differences with GTK+3.</description><duration>00:30</duration><end>17:15</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="24">Carlos Garnacho</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording>
<room>Hopper - G44</room><slug>64-ding_dong_gdkwindow_is_dead</slug><start>16:45</start><subtitle
/><title>Ding dong, GdkWindow is dead</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="3a961a4e-1d46-597f-b7b1-397ad89b325a" id="68"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T11:30:00+02:00</date><description>The move towards Wayland and container-isolated
application deployment brings a range of security benefits. But broad isolation isn't enough - we still need
fine-grained control over access to resources, otherwise it's still practical for a single compromised
application to leak significant quantities of personal data.<br><br>This presentation will
examine existing application isolation mechanisms and identify cases where they fall short. It will then go
on to cover existing kernel technologies that allow us to provide even stronger restrictions and control, and
how it's possible for us to build environments that provide high levels of security without forcing users
to give up the freedom to run whatever software they
want.</description><duration>00:45</duration><end>12:15</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo
/><persons><person id="45">Matthew Garrett</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>68-building_a_secure_desktop_with_gnome_technologies</slug><start>11:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Building a secure desktop with GNOME technologies</title><track /><type>talk</type></event><event
guid="41452287-6fc1-595a-a59a-12bd117de029" id="109"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:00:00+02:00</date><duration>00:20</duration><end>16:20</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="46">Ian Lane</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>109-unconference-1</slug><start>16:00</start><subtitle /><title>systemd in GNOME user
sessions</title><track /><type>talk</t
ype></event><event guid="cc7afd5b-dda6-5302-a41d-918795221100" id="111"><attachments
/><date>2017-07-30T16:20:00+02:00</date><duration>00:25</duration><end>16:45</end><language>eng</language><links
/><logo /><persons><person id="47">Wim Taymans</person></persons><recording><license>CC BY-SA
4.0</license><optout>false</optout></recording><room>Hopper -
G44</room><slug>111-unconference-1</slug><start>16:20</start><subtitle /><title>Pipewire</title><track
/><type>talk</type></event></room><room name="Elsewhere"><event guid="f33e9765-bd8d-55a8-a166-a3acce71554d"
id="211"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T09:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>10:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>211-venue_opens</slug><start>09:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue opens</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="1cf98b5b-9980-5b3d-a84e-c57c4e90dd64
" id="212"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T11:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>11:30</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>212-break</slug><start>11:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="ff50c8ad-efb4-50c3-b6b0-a9bc834a8797"
id="213"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T13:00:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>01:00</duration><end>14:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>213-lunch</slug><start>13:00</start><subtitle
/><title>Lunch</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="da0daac0-3475-583a-9ffa-7e0ed82aa044"
id="214"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T15:30:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:30</duration><end>16:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /
<persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>214-break</slug><start>15:30</start><subtitle
/><title>Break</title><track /><type /></event><event guid="52bf8eb3-8601-50bb-8c9d-437e91dcdfbf"
id="215"><attachments /><date>2017-07-30T18:15:00+02:00</date><description
/><duration>00:45</duration><end>19:00</end><language>eng</language><links /><logo /><persons
/><recording><license>no-video</license><optout>true</optout></recording><room>Elsewhere</room><slug>215-venue_closes</slug><start>18:15</start><subtitle
/><title>Venue closes</title><track /><type /></event></room></day></schedule>
\ No newline at end of file
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