2008

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== Unscheduled ==
== Unscheduled ==
* Kerberos
* Kerberos

Revision as of 07:33, 6 October 2008

Scheduled

[edit] Athena Under the Hood

Date: October 7, 2008, at 4:30 PM
Presenters: Marc Horowitz (marc)
Location: 4-231
Notes: How Athena Works (slides)
Abstract: Athena is a ubiquitous part of the computing infrastructure at MIT, often taken for granted. Its history goes back more than twenty years, encompassing the invention of a number of technologies which are widespread today. However, its development marked a time of rapid change in distributed computing. In some ways, Athena is still well ahead of a typical distributed computing environment.

I will discuss the history of Athena, its notable inventions, and give an overview of each of the network and workstation services which make up Athena today, including Kerberos, AFS, Moira, Hesiod, and the installation and update processes.

Bio: Marc Horowitz arrived at MIT in 1988, when Athena was still a funded research project. As a Watchmaker (student developer) at Project Athena, he worked on the Kerberos, Zephyr, and Moira projects. Marc was also vice-chairman of the Student Information Processing Board in 1991, and Secretary in 1992. From 1992 to 2000, Marc continued to maintain an informal relationship with Athena, working on commercial versions of technologies born there, especially Kerberos, and participating in follow-on open source development and IETF standards activities. Today, he is Vice President of Engineering at Square Products Corporation, a startup focusing on software for social music listening.

[edit] Understanding Git

Date: October 21, 2008, at 4:30 PM
Presenters: Nelson Elhage (nelhage) and Anders Kaseorg (andersk)
Location: 4-231
Notes: Understanding Git (slides) (source for slides)
Abstract: Git is a free software distributed version control system originally written by Linus Torvalds for Linux kernel development. It is increasingly commonly used, and learning to use it can be greatly benefited by a little help from those who understand how to use it. This talk will provide a brief tutorial on how to use Git and a technical overview how it works under the covers.
  1. REDIRECT 2008/11-06

[edit] General structure of the Linux kernel

Date: November 11, 2008, at 3:30 PM
Presenters: Geoffrey Thomas (geofft)
Location: 4-231
Abstract: The Linux kernel is the core of a large and complex operating system, and while it's huge, it is well organized in terms of subsystems and layers. In this talk, we will explore the general structure of the Linux kernel and get to know its major subsystems and core interfaces.

[edit] Ksplice

Date: November 18, 2008, at 3:30 PM
Presenters: Jeff Arnold (jbarnold), Tim Abbott (tabbott), and Anders Kaseorg (andersk)
Location: 4-231
Notes: Ksplice technical paper
Abstract: Ksplice is a new (open source) tool for applying traditional source code patches to the Linux kernel without rebooting. You can use it to keep your server or workstation up-to-date with security patches. This talk will explain how Ksplice works.

Unscheduled

  • Kerberos
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