Hi ala,
In this edition of our newsletter, we are thrilled to give you a preview of the exciting talks we have in store at this week’s Ubuntu Summit
The Ubuntu Summit is three things wrapped into one: a showcase, a launchpad, and a forum of ideas. It’s a showcase of projects that have had a positive impact and have the potential to change industries. It’s a launchpad for projects that show promise and need a hand-up. It’s a forum of ideas, because people come together, debate, and collaborate. Because Ubuntu has always been built on collaboration, this summit is a space for the entire open source community. We’re here to highlight excellence from every corner of the ecosystem.
So, what can you expect from Ubuntu Summit 26.04? We’ve put together a short cross-section of talks we believe represent the breadth of what we’ll be covering.
Register for Ubuntu Summit 26.04 | Access the schedule
Sessions include:
- Minimal rust rocks, from Marcin Konowalczyk: How the rust toolchain works, how Canonical builds hardened images, and what lies beyond.
- A dive into Meshtastic, from Jonathan Bennett: The history of Meshtastic, the business and culture of open source, and a live demo.
- A primer on Gleam, from Giacomo Cavalieri: Why Gleam chooses to stay small, focused, and resolutely practical.
- An overview of DuckDB, from Gábor Szárnyas: Explaining DuckDB’s “friendly SQL” language and presenting their command line interface that’s optimized for productivity.
- How to use Lemonade to run LLMs on Ubuntu and AMD, from Ken VanDine and Mario Limociello: What it took to modify Lemonade server to use the natively packaged ROCm stack on Ubuntu.
- SpacemiT's work on RISC-V, from Yanbang Sun (Will): Sharing SpacemiT’s open source initiatives and technical contributions to RISC-V development.
- Building the "Internet Computer" right in your browser, from Nariman Jelveh: What if your entire computer lived in the browser, and the whole stack was open source?
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