Action: Feed
Also available in Deutsch[link1], Français[link2], Русский[link3]{{feed url="https://...[|https://...|https://...]" [title="News feed title|no"] "text" - displayed as title "no" - means show no title empty title - title taken from feed [max="x"] [time=1] 1 - show time tag of feed item 0 - hide time tag of feed item (default) [nomark=1] 1 - makes feed header h3 and feed-items headers h4 0 - makes it all default }}
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Feed Title: openSUSE News[link4]
Speakers Set Course for openSUSE Conference[link5]
The openSUSE Conference 2025 in Nuremberg from June 26 - 28 is shaping up to be a great gathering for the open source software community.
There are three packed days of presentations, workshops and discussion along with three keynotes.
This year’s conference features SUSE CEO Dirk-Peter van Leeuwen who will recognize the openSUSE community’s 20-year journey. Peer Heinlein, who founded the Heinlein Group, which includes companies like Heinlein Support, mailbox.org, OpenTalk, and OpenCloud, will provide another keynote on the same day and his talk will focus on the risks users face when using proprietary software. Another keynote from Tropic Square’s CEO Jan Pleskač will spotlight the growing need to extend open source hardware.
The conference is offering a broad look at where openSUSE is heading and what challenges are emerging for the project’s development and how the open-source communities can resolve them.
There are several sessions drawing attention like “Public Money? Public Code!” and a series of presentations addressing Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) and Network and Information Security 2 Directive (NIS2) readiness. These sessions explored how European cybersecurity regulations are impacting small to medium open-source vendors and what steps are needed to align with the evolving legal landscape.
On the technical side, integration and automation sessions continue. One talk demonstrated how Uyuni can be tightly woven into existing infrastructure management tools like Ansible and Terraform. Another session unveiled a tool called container-snap, a prototype designed to bring atomic OS updates through OCI images, which helps eliminate the risk of broken upgrades.
The Leap 16.0 Beta will have a dedicated session, and the future of SUSE Linux Enterprise will be discussed in a talk titled “From ALP to SLES16”.
Workshops on LLMs will show how to run large language models locally and turn them into functional agents and a popular penguin AI project called Kowalski should capture some attention at the conference.
Underlying many talks is a shared urgency around user empowerment. The “End of 10 Install Workshop” sessions are aimed at encouraging users to install openSUSE on aging or repurposed hardware based on Microsoft’s end-of-life date for Windows 10.
The full schedule of the openSUSE Conference 2025 is available at events.opensuse.org.

{{feed url="https://www.flickr.com/services/feeds/groups_pool.gne?id=82323459@N00&lang=de-de&format=atom" max=1 time=1}}

Feed Title: Pool von Japan Through the Eyes of Others[link6]
Eight ways[link7]
DirtyGlassEye hat dem Pool ein Foto hinzugefügt:
I don't know how common it is in the rest of the world, but as an American, seeing a diagonal crossway like this is pretty abnormal and photogenic. It helps that there are actually quite a few of them here in Tokyo. It has a unique charm and look to it for an urban shot. There's a reason why everyone takes the time to shoot Shibuya Crossing....
Except for me who just couldn't get a good shot at Shibuya Crossing. I wasn't about to pay money just to get in a good position for that shot because the sky was not on my side, and there aren't a whole lot of free (or cheap), or unoccupied, observation decks. I do have shots from it, but I doubt I should upload them, I doubt even heavy editing can save em.
Meanwhile this crossing as Yoyogi Station offered me a better chance. It was another strange 8-way crossing. And I had a decent foreground. I didn't bother trying to get a motion blur cause there weren't as many people here.
The editing phase proved tricky. There were strange blue outlines on a few of the objects (a consequence of the saturation) so I made another layer with little to no saturation and put in a few spots were it was the most obvious. It also took me an embarassingly long amount of time to move the skyscraper in the back, considering I already did something similar for Otagi shot. But perhaps the biggest blow in my book, is the fact that I had to leave some people in the shot, which if you recall my first Disneysea shot, I go to extreme lengths to remove, but I just had no way of removing them this time. Ah well I guess this is an urban shot after all so people are natural, still, I didn't like it.
But I was pretty satisfied with the outcome of this photo, cause everything else lined up fine.

- [link1] https://wackowiki.org/doc/Doc/Deutsch/Aktionen/Feed
- [link2] https://wackowiki.org/doc/Doc/Français/Fonctions/Feed
- [link3] https://wackowiki.org/doc/Doc/Русский/Действия/Feed
- [link4] https://news.opensuse.org/
- [link5] https://news.opensuse.org/2025/06/03/speakers-set-course-for-osc/
- [link6] https://www.flickr.com/groups/japaneyes/pool/
- [link7] https://www.flickr.com/photos/202546782@N03/54566092647/in/pool-82323459@N00