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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Promotion of free software  





2 LinuxTag e.V.  





3 History  



3.1  Kaiserslautern  



3.1.1  LinuxTag 1996 - 1999  







3.2  Stuttgart  



3.2.1  LinuxTag 2000  





3.2.2  LinuxTag 2001  







3.3  Karlsruhe  



3.3.1  LinuxTag 2002  





3.3.2  LinuxTag 2003  





3.3.3  LinuxTag 2004  





3.3.4  LinuxTag 2005  







3.4  Wiesbaden  



3.4.1  LinuxTag 2006  







3.5  Berlin  



3.5.1  LinuxTag 2007  





3.5.2  LinuxTag 2008  





3.5.3  LinuxTag 2009  





3.5.4  LinuxTag 2010  





3.5.5  LinuxTag 2011  





3.5.6  LinuxTag 2012  





3.5.7  LinuxTag 2013  





3.5.8  LinuxTag 2014  









4 External links  





5 References  














LinuxTag: Difference between revisions






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==== LinuxTag 1996 - 1999 ====

==== LinuxTag 1996 - 1999 ====

The first LinuxTag in 1996 was a theme night on Linux.

The first LinuxTag was a theme night on Linux. In 1998, the LinuxTag conference and exhibition was attended by circa 3,000 visitors. In 1999 the event was nationally announced, and drew some 7,000 visitors. It was the first time LinuxTag filled a whole building of the university and the last time it was held in [[Kaiserslautern]]. In the aftermath of the event, the [[#LinuxTag e.V.|LinuxTag association]] was founded.


In 1997 was the ionmly year in which two LinuxTag events were organized.


In 1998, the LinuxTag conference and exhibition was attended by circa 3,000 visitors.


In 1999 the event was nationally announced, and drew some 7,000 visitors. It was the first time the LinuxTag exhibition filled more than a whole building of the university while the talks used all major lecture rooms and the last time it was held in [[Kaiserslautern]]. It was also the first time an opportunity to take the [[Linux_Professional_Institute_Certification_Programs#LPIC-1_Exam_101_Topics[2]|LPI Exam 101]] was offered.

In the aftermath of this event, the [[#LinuxTag e.V.|LinuxTag association]] was founded.



=== Stuttgart ===

=== Stuttgart ===


Revision as of 17:20, 9 September 2023

LinuxTag logo

LinuxTag was an annual Free and Open Source Software (FLOSS) conference and exposition with an emphasis on Linux but also BSD descendants located in Germany. The name is a compound with the German Tag meaning "Day", as it was initially a single day conference, but soon extended to multiple days, then always including a weekend. LinuxTag was the world's largest FLOSS conference and exhibition for years and aimed to provide a comprehensive overview of the Linux and Free Software market as well to promote contacts between users and developers. With this broad approach LinuxTag was one of the most important events of this kind.

LinuxTag's slogan, "Where .COM meets .ORG", refers to its stated aim of bringing together commercial and non-commercial groups in the IT sector. Each year's event also had its own motto, often reflecting a specific topic which was focused in that year.

Promotion of free software

LinuxTag regards itself as part of the Free Software movement and hence promoted this community by an extraordinary degree through supporting numerous Open Source Software projects. LinuxTag offered these projects to promote their software and their concepts, and thus present themselves to the public in an appropriate manner, with their own booths, forums and lectures, free of charge. The goal is to encourage projects to share concepts and content to the benefit of other groups and companies, and to provide forums for in-depth discussions of new technologies and opportunities.

LinuxTag e.V.

The non-profit association "LinuxTag e.V." was founded in preparation for LinuxTag's move from Kaiserslautern to the University of Stuttgart in 2000. The association plans and organizes the LinuxTag event by volunteer work and guides its ideological development. The association LinuxTag e.V. is registered in Association Register VR 2239 of the Kaiserslautern District Court. The association manages the LinuxTag name and word mark. The purpose of the association, according to its bylaws,[1] is "the promotion of Free Software", and is pursued primarily by organizing the LinuxTag events.

The association is represented by a three-person executive board, supplemented by several representatives with delegated authority. All members of the LinuxTag association are volunteers and receive no remuneration for their service, with the sole exception from 1 April to 31 July 2005 when the First Chairman and CFO were employed and remunerated by the association. Surpluses resulting from the LinuxTag events or sponsorship are reinvested in the association's non-profit activities.

History

LinuxTag was launched in 1996 by a handful of active members of the Unix Working Group (Unix-AG) at the University of Kaiserslautern.[2] They wanted to inform the fellow students and the public about Linux and Open Source Software, which both were in their early stages at this time. The first LinuxTag event in 1996 was basically a "Linux install party" accompanied with a few talks and drew less than 100 participants. However, since then the event has changed venues several times to keep pace with rapidly growing numbers of speakers, exhibitors and visitors.

Kaiserslautern

The first couple of LinuxTag events were held at the University of Kaiserslautern.

LinuxTag 1996 - 1999

The first LinuxTag in 1996 was a theme night on Linux.

In 1997 was the ionmly year in which two LinuxTag events were organized.

In 1998, the LinuxTag conference and exhibition was attended by circa 3,000 visitors.

In 1999 the event was nationally announced, and drew some 7,000 visitors. It was the first time the LinuxTag exhibition filled more than a whole building of the university while the talks used all major lecture rooms and the last time it was held in Kaiserslautern. It was also the first time an opportunity to take the [[Linux_Professional_Institute_Certification_Programs#LPIC-1_Exam_101_Topics[2]|LPI Exam 101]] was offered. In the aftermath of this event, the LinuxTag association was founded.

Stuttgart

In 2000 and 2001 LinuxTag was held in Stuttgart.

LinuxTag 2000

LinuxTag 2000 was held at the Stuttgart Trade Fair from 29 June to 2 July and was attended by approximately 17,000 visitors. The conference included a business track for the first time, devoted to such topics as IT security, legal aspects of Free Software, potential applications of Linux and Open Source Software in commercial applications. IT decision-makers presented case studies of applications of Free Software.[3][4]

LinuxTag 2001

LinuxTag 2001 took place at Stuttgart Trade Fair from 5 to 8 July, with 14,870 visitors. The event was held under the patronage of the German Ministry of Economy. Keynote speakers were Eric S. Raymond, Rob "Cmdr Taco" Malda from Slashdot and John "Maddog" HallofLinux International.[5][6]

Karlsruhe

LinuxTag 2004 at Messe Karlsruhe

From 2002 to 2005, the LinuxTag conference and exhibition was held in Karlsruhe.

LinuxTag 2002

LinuxTag was held in 2002 for the first time from 06.06.2002 to 09.02.2002 at the Messe Karlsruhe with about 13,000 visitors. The motto of the conference was "Open your mind, open your heart, open your source!". Approximately 100 booths comprised the exhibition. [7][8]

LinuxTag 2003

Novell/SuSE at the LinuxTag 2004

LinuxTag 2003 was titled Open Horizons and was held from 10 to 13 July 2003 at Messe Karlsruhe. [9] [10] Together with the admission ticket for 10 euros, visitors received the LinuxTag edition of the initial release of the Knoppix DVD and a Tux pin. With 19,500 visitors, the number of visitors increased by 40 percent over the previous year.

Circa 150 exhibitors, both businesses and non-profit groups were represented. Apple showed Mac OS X running Open Source Software. Other highlights included the release of OpenGroupware.org, OpenOffice.org, a conversion to run Linux of several dozen Xboxes, some by a hardware modification by two solder points, some by utilizing so-called MechInstallers.

There was also a Programming Competition and on Sunday, 13 July 2003 from 13 to 14 o'clock a world record attempt took place: On a server 100 Linux desktop sessions with Gnome and KDE were simultaneously running, which could be used by everyone on the Internet.

Besides the exhibition also sub-conferences were held at which renowned experts discussed a subject. There was, for example, a Debian conference and on Sunday there was a lecture on TCPA, followed by a discussion. The Business and Government sub-conference with 400 participants grew by about 60% compared to 2002. The free lecture program was opened on Friday by the Parliamentary State Secretary, Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour (BMWA), Rezzo Schlauch. Keynote speakers were Jon "Maddog" HallofLinux International, Georg Greve of Free Software Foundation Europe and Matthias Kalle Dalheimer of Klarälvdalens Datakonsult AB.

With Webcams one could take a virtual visit of the fair. The "Pingu-Cam" recorded pictures of Penguin in the Karlsruhe Zoo, which is located right next to the location of the Messe Karlsruhe at that time.

LinuxTag 2004

Red Hat at the LinuxTag 2004

LinuxTag 2004 took place from 23 to 26 June for the third time at the Messe Karlsruhe in 2004. Those who applied on the LinuxTag homepage got in for free. For the regular entrance fee of € 10 one received a Tux-pin, a Knoppix DVD and a DVD with FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD.

LinuxTag 2004 had the slogan "Free source - free world". 16,175 visitors were counted. [11] [12] With the record number of about 170 exhibitors, among many freelance projects, but also numerous large and medium-sized enterprises. Hewlett-Packard was the third time Official Cornerstone Partner. Other major companies at the exhibition were the C & L Verlag, Intel, Novell, Oracle, SAP and Sun Microsystems. For the first time Microsoft was represented with a booth.

On the single-day business and administration sub-conference on 24 June business and government case studies plus success stories of the use of open source software were presented. Among other things, also issues with computer viruses and worms waere addressed.

For the free conference, a record of about 350 proposals from 20 countries were handed in, of which 130 could be accommodated in the program. The fundamental threat of software patents for Open Source Software was an important topic. As already in 1999 one could undergo a LPI 101 certification at LinuxTag. As at most LinuxTag events, a coding marathon and a hacking contest were performed.

LinuxTag 2005

LinuxTag 2005 took place in the period from 22 to 25 June at the Messe Karlsruhe.[13] LinuxTag 2005 was the 11th LinuxTag and titled "Linux everywhere". As usual a free conference with far more than 100 talks and presentations was accompanied by a large exhibition with booths from various companies and projects, plus on 22 June 2005 the business and administration sub-conference. Additionally free workshops and tutorials were offered.

Jimmy Wales announced a collaboration between Wikipedia and KDE in his opening speech. Through a web API every program can directly access Wikipedia, which was used by the KDE Media Player Amarok version 1.3 to access the Wikipedia articles of artists.

The organizers counted about 12,000 visitors, a little less than in previous years, which was mainly caused by the newly introduced mandatory entrance fee and the hottest week of the year 2005.

Wiesbaden

2006 LinuxTag happened in Wiesbaden.

LinuxTag 2006

Federal Minister of Justice Brigitte Zypries at the Wikipedia booth

LinuxTag 2006 took place from 3 to 6 May 2006 in the Rhein-Main-Hallen in Wiesbaden under the motto „See, what's ahead“.[14][15] According to the organizers, over 9,000 people from over 30 nations attended LinuxTag 2006. There were many, often international lectures and various information booths, present among others were IBM, Avira and Sun Microsystems, but some other regular exhibitors as Hewlett-PackardorRed Hat were missing. Three teams participated in the annual hacking contest.

The most visited lecture of the year was the KeynoteofUbuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth. The "chief dreamer of Ubuntu" referred to himself and the good cooperation of users with developers. He stressed that Kubuntu and Ubuntu should be treated equally and that there is a good cooperation between the developers of both. There was also the opportunity to watch some of the lectures by video stream, which was used by approximately 1,800 people.

Berlin

Since 2007, the LinuxTag took place in Berlin at the Messe Berlin, located under the Funkturm Berlin.

LinuxTag 2007

LinuxTag 2007 took place from 30 May to 2 June 2007 with the motto "Come in: We're open" . It was attended by about 9,600 people.[16]

The event was held under the auspices of Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble.[17] This sparked a lively debate due to the political attitudeofWolfgang Schäuble in his administrative role, which triggered calls to boycott LinuxTag.[18][19] This was even reported and discussed outside of Germany.[20]

LinuxTag 2008

LinuxTag 2008 took place from 28 to 31 May at the Messe Berlin with 11,612 visitors. The second LinuxTag in the German capital was under the patronage of (then) German Foreign Minister and Vice Chancellor Frank-Walter Steinmeier and was labelled as a part of a six-day "IT Week in the Capital Region", which also included the IT business trade fair IT Profits under the patronage of the Federal Minister of transport as a co-event to LinuxTag. LinuxTag 2008 hosted as sub-conferences the second German Asterisk day, a user and developer conference for IP Telephony and the 8th @Kit Congress, on which legal issues of professional IT use are discussed. Core topics of LinuxTag 2008 were "Highlights of digital lifestyle" and the "Mobile + Embedded Area". [21]

LinuxTag 2009

LinuxTag 2009 took place from 24 to 27 June at the Messe Berlin[22], attracting over 10,000 visitors. As in 2008 it was placed under the patronage of German Foreign Minister and Vice Chancellor Frank-Walter Steinmeier. The new president of the Free Software Foundation Europe Karsten Gerloff attended LinuxTag. A focal point was "business processes using Linux" and "Open Source Software in the colours of the Tricolor" for which 14 Open Source Software suppliers from France displayed their product and service ranges.

LinuxTag 2010

LinuxTag 2010 was the 16th LinuxTag and took place from 9 to 12 June 2010 at the Messe Berlin.[23] It was attended by about 11,600 people and stood under the patronage of Cornelia Rogall-Grothe, Federal Government Commissioner for Information Technology. Keynote speakers included Microsoft's general manager James Utzschneider who stunned the audience with his open approach to Open Source Software, the CEO of SugarCRM, Larry Augustin, who underlined the economic impact of FLOSS and its leverage in cloud computing, the "director of open source" at Google, Chris DiBona, who underlined the professional level of LinuxTag, the kernel developer Jonathan Corbet who gave an outlook on the next Linux kernel 2.6.35, and Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth layhed out the next milestones for the Ubuntu desktop distribution.

LinuxTag 2011

The 17th LinuxTag was held from 11 to 14 May 2011 at the Messe Berlin under the motto "Where .com meets .org".[24] It was attended by 11,578 visitors and was placed under the patronage of Cornelia Rogall-Grothe of the Federal Government Commissioner for Information Technology, again. Keynotes were given by Wim Coekaerts (Oracle), Bradley Kuhn (Software Freedom Conservancy) and Daniel Walsh (Red Hat).

LinuxTag 2012

The 18th LinuxTag happend from 23 to 26 May 2012 at the Messe Berlin with the motto "Open minds create effective solutions".[25], another time under the patronage of Cornelia Rogall-Grothe of the German Federal Government Commissioner for Information Technology. At LinuxTag, the premiere of the "Open MindManager Morning" took place, on which industry experts and educators across the IT discussed changes in society and Open Source philosophy.

In addition, there was the premiere of the new lecture series "Open Minds Economy", organized by the Open Source Business Alliance (OSBA) and Messe Berlin, which presented successful business models and applications of open source software in the fields of economy and society.

Keynotes were given by Jimmy Schulz, chairman of the project group "Interoperability, Standards and Open Source" of the commission for research on internet and digital society of the German Bundestag, Ulrich Drepper, maintainer of the GNU C standard library Glibc and Lars Knoll, employee at Nokia and chief maintainer of the QT library.

LinuxTag 2013

The 19th LinuxTag was held from 22 to 25 May 2013 on the Berlin Exhibition Grounds with the motto "In the cloud - triumph of the free software goes on".[26] It stood under the patronage of Cornelia Rogall-Grothe, the Federal Government Commissioner for Information Technology.

It was also the premiere of the Open IT Summit, which was organized as a parallel conference at LinuxTag of the Open Source Business Alliance (OSBA) and Messe Berlin with the goal to discuss the topic open source in the business environment. Additionally the OpenStack Day took place in cooperation with the OpenStack Foundation as a first major sub-conference on the subject OpenStack in Europe. The Foundation has its headquarters in the U.S. and sees itself as a global reservoir of the same name, scalable cloud management platform.

Keynotes were given by kernel developer Matthew Garrett on the subject of Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) and Secure Boot, and Benjamin Mako Hill, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), who marked so-called anti-features as unacceptable, where manufacturers build usage restrictions into devices.

LinuxTag 2014

Since about 2012, the number of visitors of LinuxTag declined despite the ever increasing use of Open Source Software. This decline in visitor numbers was interpreted as a side effect of the ubiquity of Free Software and Linux, hence not being of extraordinary interest any longer. In addition, for some years, there were many similar regional events, in Germany and other European nations, which have drawn from the concept of LinuxTag.

In order to adapt to the changes, the LinuxTag focused on the core issue of the professional use of Open Source Software, as in 2014. Therefore, LinuxTag started a strategic partnership with the droidcon.[27]

The 20th LinuxTag took place on 8 and 10 May 2014[28] at the STATION Berlin.[29] In spatial and temporal proximity were the Media Convention Berlin (6 to 7 May),[30] the re:publica (6 to 8 May) and the droidcon (8 to 10 May 2014). All events aimed towards a close relationship in order to achieve a high level of appreciation of the combined effort.[31]

External links

References

  1. ^ german Bylaws of the LinuxTag e.V. as of 2013 https://www.linuxtag.org/2013/de/der-verein/satzung.html
  • ^ german LinuxTag Unix-AG http://www.unix-ag.uni-kl.de/~linux/linuxtag.html
  • ^ german golem.de http://www.golem.de/0007/8524.html
  • ^ german heise.de http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/LinuxTag-2000-in-Stuttgart-21805.html
  • ^ german Linux-Magazin http://www.linux-magazin.de/Ausgaben/2001/09/LinuxTag-2001
  • ^ german Bild der Wissenschaft http://www.wissenschaft.de/technik-kommunikation/computer/-/journal_content/56/12054/1200596/Fachmesse-LinuxTag-in-Stuttgart-er%C3%B6ffnet/
  • ^ german O'Reilly "LinuxTag 2002 in Karlsruhe". Archived from the original on 2012-08-13. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
  • ^ pro-Linux http://www.pro-linux.de/artikel/2/564/bericht-vom-linuxtag-2002-in-karlsruhe.html
  • ^ german heise <linux<tag 2003 http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/LinuxTag-2003-mit-Coding-Marathon-81739.html
  • ^ german golem http://www.golem.de/0306/25911.html
  • ^ german LinuxTag 2004 http://www.linuxtag.org/2004/
  • ^ german LPIC101 http://www.lpice.eu/de/lpi-partner/lpi-ev/archiv-der-pressemitteilungen/09062004-pruefungen-beim-linuxtag-2004.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2005 http://www.linuxtag.org/2005/308.0.de.html
  • ^ german Heise http://www.heise.de/open/artikel/LinuxTag-2006-221931.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2006 http://www.linuxtag.org/2006/en/home/news.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2007 http://www.linuxtag.org/2007/en/home/welcome.html
  • ^ german LinuxTag Presseteam 2007: „Bundesinnenminister übernimmt Schirmherrschaft für LinuxTag in der Hauptstadt“
  • ^ germanheise online: „LinuxTag nimmt Stellung zur Schirmherrschaft Schäubles“
  • ^ LinuxTag 2007: „Stellungnahme zur Schirmherrschaft“
  • ^ slashdot: http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/05/19/2149231
  • ^ LinuxTag 2008 http://www.linuxtag.org/2008/en/home/welcome.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2009 http://www.linuxtag.org/2009/en.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2010 http://www.linuxtag.org/2010/en.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2011 http://www.linuxtag.org/2011/en.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2012 http://www.linuxtag.org/2012/en.html
  • ^ LinuxTag 2013 http://www.linuxtag.org/2013/en.html
  • ^ LinuxTag und droidcon: "Droidcon 2014". Archived from the original on 2013-12-06. Retrieved 2023-09-08.
  • ^ LinuxTag 2014 http://www.linuxtag.org/2014/
  • ^ Berlin STATION http://www.station-berlin.de/de/home.html
  • ^ Media Convention Berlin http://media-convention-berlin.de/
  • ^ Cooperation LinuxTag und droidcon: "Droidcon 2014: 8 - 10 May, 2014". Archived from the original on 2013-12-07. Retrieved 2023-09-08.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=LinuxTag&oldid=1174620765"

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    This page was last edited on 9 September 2023, at 17:20 (UTC).

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