Chris Lamb and I recently attended OSCAL'17[1], I'm writing this report based on my own experience of the event. OSCAL'17 is organized by Open Labs[2], a free software community based in Tirana, Albania.
OSCAL'17 was presented to me when I met some of the Albanian team at FSFE summit and also at FOSDEM. They are active in many other organizations too, including FSFE, Mozilla, OpenStreetmap and Fedora. They expressed an interest in Debian too, but they were not aware of any Debian Developers based there. They also run a Linux weekend (which was promoted on debian-events-eu[3]), various hackathons and other events throughout the year. There is also discussion[4] about a cryptoparty in the near future. On arriving, two members of the organizing team, Kristi and Jona, met me at the airport. They had also arranged a nice welcome gift in my hotel room[5]. The team went out of their way to welcome all the international guests. Friday, 12 May, the day before the conference, several of us met at the Hackerspace in the afternoon. It is a new facility and they are keen to expand it. Donations of hardware would be particularly welcome and would be well used. Friday night many of the visitors met at a bar near the center for drinks. On 13 May I presented a workshop about the Debian Hams[6] project, ham radio and SDR in general. I presented similar workshops at MiniDebConf Vienna and Cambridge last year. The venue had great weather and open windows from the workshop room on the first floor so I was able to mount the loop antenna externally at this event. I started setting it up a couple of hours before the workshop with help from a few members of the Open Labs team. The outdoor antenna, combined with the fact I had brought a portable ATU as well, allowed us to receive a range of commercial shortwave transmissions and ham broadcasts from much further away. A full overview of the hardware setup is on my blog[7], along with a brief video of the demo. Using the loop antenna indoors (as demonstrated at previous events) it is only likely to pick up stronger commercial shortwave stations and ham stations in the immediate vicinity of the venue (such as a transmitter in somebody's car parked outside). I went to a couple of sessions after the workshop, including one by the director of town planning who explained the arrangement[8] the city of Tirana has made with Open Labs. In the evening, speakers were invited to a feast at the restaurant Pajtimi, there was a wide range of meats and other dishes, it was quite a feast and we were well looked after. On 14 May I had a couple of sessions late in the afternoon, so I decided it would be a good idea to set up the ham radio/SDR demo at the Debian booth in the morning. The tables were set up at the edge of a courtyard and the architect had conveniently included a stairwell onto the roof so people could climb up and install their own HF antennas. As in the workshop the previous day, it was relatively easy to get the loop antenna installed a few meters above the ground and we immediately started to receive a range of signals from thousands of kilometers away. Several volunteers from the OSCAL team helped get it installed quickly. The demo was quite popular and a large number of visitors stopped to see it at the Debian booth. Shortly after lunch, I downloaded the Debian Hams ISO image[9], placed it on a USB stick and used it to boot somebody else's laptop into the SDR software (gqrx) so I could take my own laptop away for other things. Being able to do this so easily with a Debian live ISO really emphasizes the strength of Debian as a complete system. I'd like to emphasize the popularity of the demo and the fact it shows off many features of Debian combined with some interesting hardware. Other developers who want to give this demo at events do not need to have a ham license to do so, you only need a ham license for transmitting. If you don't enjoy giving talks or workshops, simply running the demo at a Debian booth is also a great idea. If you want to recreate this demo elsewhere, please see the recipe on my blog[7] and feel free to ask for help on the debian-hams list[10]. Later that day I had two more sessions, a talk about Free RTC and a discussion about the Open Agriculture project[11] and building a food computer. One particular strength of the Open Labs community that was noticed by many guests at this event was the successful commitment to diversity, in particular, computing doesn't appear to be as male dominated as in some other events. I met several people who would appear to be good candidates for future rounds of Outreachy and I posted about this on the Open Labs forum[12]. Open Labs has several successful women in leadership positions and they have also recently run a hackathon for women so there could be good opportunities for mentoring collaboration or for a future women's MiniDebConf[13] event. Regards, Daniel 1. https://oscal.openlabs.cc/ 2. https://openlabs.cc/en/ 3. https://lists.debian.org/debian-events-eu/2017/02/msg00008.html 4. https://forum.openlabs.cc/t/cryptoparty-day-openlabs-sept-2017/357/8 5. https://danielpocock.com/thank-you-oscal17-welcome-gift 6. https://www.debian.org/blends/hamradio/ 7. https://danielpocock.com/building-loop-antenna-sdr-shortwave-ham-oscal17 8. https://opendata.tirana.al 9. https://www.debian.org/blends/hamradio/get/live 10. https://lists.debian.org/debian-hams 11. https://danielpocock.com/hacking-the-food-chain-in-switzerland 12. https://forum.openlabs.cc/t/next-outreachy-internships/359 13. https://wiki.debian.org/DebianWomen/Projects/Events