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Steve DuChene led the Technical Track.
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Jon "maddog" Hall preaches Linux evangelism.
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Bob Young abandoned all prepared texts and presented his own view of the future
of Linux.
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Miguel de Icaza uses descriptive gestures to describe how RAID works.
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Michael Maher presents the Red Hat Package Manager.
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David Miller, caught in a rare moment (he's standing still enough to be
photographed), describes the genius and madness behind the Sparc
Linux port.
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Phil Hughes presents the past, present and future of Linux, including a case
study of how Linux has made him independently wealthy.
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Dr. Lloyd Brodsky presents a freely available groupware application.
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Don Rosenberg on selling Linux - Marketing for Technical Folks (photo not
available)
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Miguel de Icaza's striking graphic of a RAID 0 configuration (Redundant Array
of Inexpensive Penguins?)
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Mike Gancarz, Author of The Unix Philosophy
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Lester Hightower presents a case study of how Linux was deployed in one
company, completely replacing a Novell/Wintel setup.
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Jeff Farnsworth of Caldera presents Open Linux and the creation of a support
support network for Independent Sofware Vendors.
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Eric Raymond contrasts the traditional model of commercial software development
(the Cathederal model) with the method that produced Linux (the
Bazaar model).
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Richard Henderson on "Why you need shared libraries for Linux/Alpha, but you
don't need shoes."
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Steve Webb gives presents the different offerings that Caldera's Open Linux
line offers.
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David Mandelstam describes the workings of Wide Area Networking technolgies.
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Jim Paradis on running Linux/x86 software under Linux/Alpha
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Mark Bolzern peers into his crystal ball to see the future of Linux.
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Eric Ayers led the Business Track.
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