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SC2011

Put the 5 in HTML

in Programming, SC2011, Web Programming

Location

Ottawa, ON
Canada
45° 24' 41.6592" N, 75° 41' 53.4984" W

As the Web is evolving, the standards must keep the pace. The new version of HTML gives you the power to get the most out of the Web. It's now easier to make awesome websites and inspiring applications.Let's see together some of the last features of HTML5 and how you can unleash a more beautiful Web!

 

Event: 
SC2011
Speaker: 
Frédéric Harper

What does the financial crisis have to do with software?

in Government, SC2011, Misc

All present-day monetary systems and their supporting analytical systems are implemented in the form of computer programs, and all but the tiniest fraction of money is purely digital. In "Code is Law", Lawrence Lessig has observed that these computer programs and databases are the de facto official operational translations of legislation, regulations, policies, standards and agreements. A computer program is defined in copyright legislation and trade agreements as a type of “literary work” that exists as “a set of instructions or statements, expressed, fixed, embodied or stored in any manner, that is to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a specific result”. Rather than being neutral algorithms, they are literary works with a social purpose.

Event: 
SC2011
Speaker: 
Joseph Potvin

Imploding vs. drifting apart: the shifting density of free/libre/open source communities

in Community, SC2011, Misc

The practices of peer production communities impact the ability of their participants to contribute effectively. This presentation reflects on a draft paper that examines the role of recursive and adaptive practices in enabling participation in free/libre/open source communities. Using data gathered through in-depth interviews with participants and analyzed from a strategy as practice perspective the talk will paint a picture of the constant tension between recursive and adaptive practices that focus on the core or the periphery of communities. This perspective complements and extends the traditional notion that participation in free/libre/open source communities is primarily governed by incentive mechanisms by providing rich accounts of how successful communities thrive, while unsuccessful communities implode or drift apart based on the careful management of their practices at the different stages in their life cycle. The practical implications for peer production communities and avenues for future research will also be discussed. 


You can download an updated slide deck here.

 

Event: 
SC2011
Speaker: 
Mekki MacAulay

SC2011 Keynote: Open, Everywhere, Fast

in SC2011, Video, Mozilla, Web Programming
Mozilla

by Mike Shaver, VP of technical strategy at Mozilla

 

Event: 
SC2011
Speaker: 
Mike Shaver