On 02.12.2009 00:36, Luc Verhaegen wrote:
The kind FOSDEM organizers have given us a DevRoom on saturday the 6th of February, as requested.
Thanks a lot for organizing this, Luc!
We have a total of 6 slots available, two of which should be filled with an "introductory" talk about coreboot and one about flashrom. Introductory here means "this is what $project is, and now we dive straight into the gory details." So there are 4 more which i would like to see filled up in the next month.
Possible topics from me (time requirements vary, I'm pretty flexible in that regard): - Writing a flashrom driver for your favourite programmer (can do in 15 minutes or less). - Hands-on flash chip programming (one flash chip and one cheap home-built programmer for interested participants). Could be combined with the topic above for a "Total Flashrom Experience(tm)". - Managing user emergency support and development (flashrom is one of the most dangerous-to-working-computer projects out there). Mostly a management talk about how to deal with desperate users and nonconforming hardware without getting a black eye. Not really my favourite topic, but if there is overwhelming demand, I can do. - Using flashrom to detect BIOS rootkits and other nasty stuff living in your BIOS chip (with demo and background).
I gave the BIOS rootkit detection talk at 0sec conference in Berne and OpenExpo in Zürich (with quite a lot of audience participation each time), tailored for the needs of each event. Depending on what the audience expects, I will come up with some new stuff and adjust the main focus of that talk on the security aspect or the real-world problems faced by this task.
It would be great if someone else who is involved in flashrom development right now could fill one of the slots. With Luc tackling the flash enable stuff, I can either cover one of the topics I mentioned above or give a general introductory flashrom talk. Cooperative talks are an option for me as well.
Oh, and we need all the external programmers supported by flashrom for display purposes. (Photos are also acceptable, but being able to show the real stuff is so much more exciting for the audience.)
Regards, Carl-Daniel