Archive pour April 2009

BarCamp Hanoi – 19th April 2009

Friday 10 April 2009

BarCamp Hanoi

Barcamp Hanoi 2009 will be held on April 19th, from 8.30 AM to 5.00 PM, at RMIT International University, Hanoi campus – 2/2C Van Phuc Compound, Kim Ma street, Hanoi.

Topics may include, but are not limited to: online services, social media, startups, UI design, entrepreneurship, VC, Web 2.0 technologies, online marketing, online advertising, online payment, e-commerce, open source software, hardware hacking, robotics, mobile computing, bioinformatics, programming languages, even the future of technology or global issues.

Registration is free and the number of seats is limited. Click here to register your topic.


Barcamp là một sự kiện về giáo dục về công nghệ không theo bất kỳ khuôn khổ truyền thống nào. Hơn cả một sự kiện về giáo dục, đây là một nơi cho những người cùng sở thích và đam mê gặp gỡ và chia sẻ những kiến thức và kinh nghiệm với công nghệ

Barcamp Hanoi 2009 sẽ được tổ chức vào 19 tháng 4, từ 8h30 sáng đến 5 giờ chiều ở trường Đại học Quốc tế  RMIT, 2/2C khu Ngoại giao đoàn Vạn Phúc, đường Kim Mã, Hà Nội.

Bạn có thể đăng ký nội dung tham gia tại đây.

Hands on Ubuntu LTSP at CNF (18/04/2009)

Friday 10 April 2009

LTSP stands for the Linux Terminal Server project. It is a technology which ables several users to work on a same computer (the LTSP server) through connected terminal clients (the LTSP network). Similar technologies (requesting special equipment hardware) exist in the Windows environment, but LTSP under GNU/Linux makes it very cost effective as no special hardware is necessary other than ordinary network components.

After nearly one year of an experimental LTSP deployment, involving one Core 2 Quad (4 GB RAM) server installed with Ubuntu 8.04 serving up to 16 terminal clients, the Campus numérique francophone of Hanoi is launching its first hands-on LTSP short training course (in Vietnamese) on saturday 18th April 2009 (see details in Vietnamese here).

This first course of 3.5 hours should be sufficient for providing GNU/Linux users the ease of installing themselves a small LTSP network for their own purpose afterwards.

The LTSP technology, associated with Ubuntu, makes it an user-friendly experience, even for GNU/Linux beginners (not complete beginners though, but who are at ease with using computers), allowing them to recycle old computers for e.g. building up an internet-connected network in small libraries, associations, at home, etc.