Focus on:
All days
16 May 2026
17 May 2026
All sessions
Closing remarks
Lennart Poettering - Adding Trust to Linux...
Opening
Hide Contributions
Indico style
Indico style - inline minutes
Indico style - numbered
Indico style - numbered + minutes
Indico Weeks View
Back to Conference View
Choose Timezone
Use the event/category timezone
Specify a timezone
Africa/Abidjan
Africa/Accra
Africa/Addis_Ababa
Africa/Algiers
Africa/Asmara
Africa/Bamako
Africa/Bangui
Africa/Banjul
Africa/Bissau
Africa/Blantyre
Africa/Brazzaville
Africa/Bujumbura
Africa/Cairo
Africa/Casablanca
Africa/Ceuta
Africa/Conakry
Africa/Dakar
Africa/Dar_es_Salaam
Africa/Djibouti
Africa/Douala
Africa/El_Aaiun
Africa/Freetown
Africa/Gaborone
Africa/Harare
Africa/Johannesburg
Africa/Juba
Africa/Kampala
Africa/Khartoum
Africa/Kigali
Africa/Kinshasa
Africa/Lagos
Africa/Libreville
Africa/Lome
Africa/Luanda
Africa/Lubumbashi
Africa/Lusaka
Africa/Malabo
Africa/Maputo
Africa/Maseru
Africa/Mbabane
Africa/Mogadishu
Africa/Monrovia
Africa/Nairobi
Africa/Ndjamena
Africa/Niamey
Africa/Nouakchott
Africa/Ouagadougou
Africa/Porto-Novo
Africa/Sao_Tome
Africa/Tripoli
Africa/Tunis
Africa/Windhoek
America/Adak
America/Anchorage
America/Anguilla
America/Antigua
America/Araguaina
America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires
America/Argentina/Catamarca
America/Argentina/Cordoba
America/Argentina/Jujuy
America/Argentina/La_Rioja
America/Argentina/Mendoza
America/Argentina/Rio_Gallegos
America/Argentina/Salta
America/Argentina/San_Juan
America/Argentina/San_Luis
America/Argentina/Tucuman
America/Argentina/Ushuaia
America/Aruba
America/Asuncion
America/Atikokan
America/Bahia
America/Bahia_Banderas
America/Barbados
America/Belem
America/Belize
America/Blanc-Sablon
America/Boa_Vista
America/Bogota
America/Boise
America/Cambridge_Bay
America/Campo_Grande
America/Cancun
America/Caracas
America/Cayenne
America/Cayman
America/Chicago
America/Chihuahua
America/Ciudad_Juarez
America/Costa_Rica
America/Creston
America/Cuiaba
America/Curacao
America/Danmarkshavn
America/Dawson
America/Dawson_Creek
America/Denver
America/Detroit
America/Dominica
America/Edmonton
America/Eirunepe
America/El_Salvador
America/Fort_Nelson
America/Fortaleza
America/Glace_Bay
America/Goose_Bay
America/Grand_Turk
America/Grenada
America/Guadeloupe
America/Guatemala
America/Guayaquil
America/Guyana
America/Halifax
America/Havana
America/Hermosillo
America/Indiana/Indianapolis
America/Indiana/Knox
America/Indiana/Marengo
America/Indiana/Petersburg
America/Indiana/Tell_City
America/Indiana/Vevay
America/Indiana/Vincennes
America/Indiana/Winamac
America/Inuvik
America/Iqaluit
America/Jamaica
America/Juneau
America/Kentucky/Louisville
America/Kentucky/Monticello
America/Kralendijk
America/La_Paz
America/Lima
America/Los_Angeles
America/Lower_Princes
America/Maceio
America/Managua
America/Manaus
America/Marigot
America/Martinique
America/Matamoros
America/Mazatlan
America/Menominee
America/Merida
America/Metlakatla
America/Mexico_City
America/Miquelon
America/Moncton
America/Monterrey
America/Montevideo
America/Montserrat
America/Nassau
America/New_York
America/Nome
America/Noronha
America/North_Dakota/Beulah
America/North_Dakota/Center
America/North_Dakota/New_Salem
America/Nuuk
America/Ojinaga
America/Panama
America/Paramaribo
America/Phoenix
America/Port-au-Prince
America/Port_of_Spain
America/Porto_Velho
America/Puerto_Rico
America/Punta_Arenas
America/Rankin_Inlet
America/Recife
America/Regina
America/Resolute
America/Rio_Branco
America/Santarem
America/Santiago
America/Santo_Domingo
America/Sao_Paulo
America/Scoresbysund
America/Sitka
America/St_Barthelemy
America/St_Johns
America/St_Kitts
America/St_Lucia
America/St_Thomas
America/St_Vincent
America/Swift_Current
America/Tegucigalpa
America/Thule
America/Tijuana
America/Toronto
America/Tortola
America/Vancouver
America/Whitehorse
America/Winnipeg
America/Yakutat
Antarctica/Casey
Antarctica/Davis
Antarctica/DumontDUrville
Antarctica/Macquarie
Antarctica/Mawson
Antarctica/McMurdo
Antarctica/Palmer
Antarctica/Rothera
Antarctica/Syowa
Antarctica/Troll
Antarctica/Vostok
Arctic/Longyearbyen
Asia/Aden
Asia/Almaty
Asia/Amman
Asia/Anadyr
Asia/Aqtau
Asia/Aqtobe
Asia/Ashgabat
Asia/Atyrau
Asia/Baghdad
Asia/Bahrain
Asia/Baku
Asia/Bangkok
Asia/Barnaul
Asia/Beirut
Asia/Bishkek
Asia/Brunei
Asia/Chita
Asia/Choibalsan
Asia/Colombo
Asia/Damascus
Asia/Dhaka
Asia/Dili
Asia/Dubai
Asia/Dushanbe
Asia/Famagusta
Asia/Gaza
Asia/Hebron
Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh
Asia/Hong_Kong
Asia/Hovd
Asia/Irkutsk
Asia/Jakarta
Asia/Jayapura
Asia/Jerusalem
Asia/Kabul
Asia/Kamchatka
Asia/Karachi
Asia/Kathmandu
Asia/Khandyga
Asia/Kolkata
Asia/Krasnoyarsk
Asia/Kuala_Lumpur
Asia/Kuching
Asia/Kuwait
Asia/Macau
Asia/Magadan
Asia/Makassar
Asia/Manila
Asia/Muscat
Asia/Nicosia
Asia/Novokuznetsk
Asia/Novosibirsk
Asia/Omsk
Asia/Oral
Asia/Phnom_Penh
Asia/Pontianak
Asia/Pyongyang
Asia/Qatar
Asia/Qostanay
Asia/Qyzylorda
Asia/Riyadh
Asia/Sakhalin
Asia/Samarkand
Asia/Seoul
Asia/Shanghai
Asia/Singapore
Asia/Srednekolymsk
Asia/Taipei
Asia/Tashkent
Asia/Tbilisi
Asia/Tehran
Asia/Thimphu
Asia/Tokyo
Asia/Tomsk
Asia/Ulaanbaatar
Asia/Urumqi
Asia/Ust-Nera
Asia/Vientiane
Asia/Vladivostok
Asia/Yakutsk
Asia/Yangon
Asia/Yekaterinburg
Asia/Yerevan
Atlantic/Azores
Atlantic/Bermuda
Atlantic/Canary
Atlantic/Cape_Verde
Atlantic/Faroe
Atlantic/Madeira
Atlantic/Reykjavik
Atlantic/South_Georgia
Atlantic/St_Helena
Atlantic/Stanley
Australia/Adelaide
Australia/Brisbane
Australia/Broken_Hill
Australia/Darwin
Australia/Eucla
Australia/Hobart
Australia/Lindeman
Australia/Lord_Howe
Australia/Melbourne
Australia/Perth
Australia/Sydney
Canada/Atlantic
Canada/Central
Canada/Eastern
Canada/Mountain
Canada/Newfoundland
Canada/Pacific
Europe/Amsterdam
Europe/Andorra
Europe/Astrakhan
Europe/Athens
Europe/Belgrade
Europe/Berlin
Europe/Bratislava
Europe/Brussels
Europe/Bucharest
Europe/Budapest
Europe/Busingen
Europe/Chisinau
Europe/Copenhagen
Europe/Dublin
Europe/Gibraltar
Europe/Guernsey
Europe/Helsinki
Europe/Isle_of_Man
Europe/Istanbul
Europe/Jersey
Europe/Kaliningrad
Europe/Kirov
Europe/Kyiv
Europe/Lisbon
Europe/Ljubljana
Europe/London
Europe/Luxembourg
Europe/Madrid
Europe/Malta
Europe/Mariehamn
Europe/Minsk
Europe/Monaco
Europe/Moscow
Europe/Oslo
Europe/Paris
Europe/Podgorica
Europe/Prague
Europe/Riga
Europe/Rome
Europe/Samara
Europe/San_Marino
Europe/Sarajevo
Europe/Saratov
Europe/Simferopol
Europe/Skopje
Europe/Sofia
Europe/Stockholm
Europe/Tallinn
Europe/Tirane
Europe/Ulyanovsk
Europe/Vaduz
Europe/Vatican
Europe/Vienna
Europe/Vilnius
Europe/Volgograd
Europe/Warsaw
Europe/Zagreb
Europe/Zurich
GMT
Indian/Antananarivo
Indian/Chagos
Indian/Christmas
Indian/Cocos
Indian/Comoro
Indian/Kerguelen
Indian/Mahe
Indian/Maldives
Indian/Mauritius
Indian/Mayotte
Indian/Reunion
Pacific/Apia
Pacific/Auckland
Pacific/Bougainville
Pacific/Chatham
Pacific/Chuuk
Pacific/Easter
Pacific/Efate
Pacific/Fakaofo
Pacific/Fiji
Pacific/Funafuti
Pacific/Galapagos
Pacific/Gambier
Pacific/Guadalcanal
Pacific/Guam
Pacific/Honolulu
Pacific/Kanton
Pacific/Kiritimati
Pacific/Kosrae
Pacific/Kwajalein
Pacific/Majuro
Pacific/Marquesas
Pacific/Midway
Pacific/Nauru
Pacific/Niue
Pacific/Norfolk
Pacific/Noumea
Pacific/Pago_Pago
Pacific/Palau
Pacific/Pitcairn
Pacific/Pohnpei
Pacific/Port_Moresby
Pacific/Rarotonga
Pacific/Saipan
Pacific/Tahiti
Pacific/Tarawa
Pacific/Tongatapu
Pacific/Wake
Pacific/Wallis
US/Alaska
US/Arizona
US/Central
US/Eastern
US/Hawaii
US/Mountain
US/Pacific
UTC
Save
Europe/Berlin
English (United Kingdom)
Deutsch (Deutschland)
English (United Kingdom)
English (United States)
Español (España)
Français (France)
Polski (Polska)
Português (Brasil)
Türkçe (Türkiye)
Čeština (Česko)
Монгол (Монгол)
Українська (Україна)
中文 (中国)
Login
Linux App Summit 2026
from
Saturday, 16 May 2026 (09:00)
to
Sunday, 17 May 2026 (21:00)
Monday, 11 May 2026
Tuesday, 12 May 2026
Wednesday, 13 May 2026
Thursday, 14 May 2026
Friday, 15 May 2026
Saturday, 16 May 2026
09:50
09:50 - 09:59
10:00
(Keynote speaker)
(Keynote speaker)
10:00 - 11:00
11:00
Breaking architecture barriers: x86 gaming on ARM
-
Tony Wasserka
Breaking architecture barriers: x86 gaming on ARM
(Main Track)
Tony Wasserka
11:00 - 11:40
Presenting FEX, a translation layer to run x86 apps and games on ARM devices: Learn why x86 is such a pain to emulate, what tricks and techniques make your games fly with minimal translation overhead, and how we are seamless enough that you'll forget what CPU you're using in the first place! ARM-powered hardware in laptops promises longer battery life at the same compute performance as before, but a translation layer like FEX is needed to run existing x86 software. We'll look at the technical challenges involved in making this possible: designing a high-performance binary recompiler, translating Linux system calls across architectures, and forwarding library calls to their ARM counterparts. Gaming in particular poses extreme demands on FEX and raises further questions: How do we enable GPU acceleration in an emulated environment? How can we integrate Wine to run Windows games on Linux ARM? Why is Steam itself the ultimate boss battle for x86 emulation? And why in the world do we care more about page sizes than German standardization institutes? This talk will be accessible to a technical audience and gaming enthusiasts alike. However, be prepared to learn cursed knowledge you won't be able to forget!
11:40
Break
Break
11:40 - 12:00
12:00
Flatpak and Portals: A Status Update
-
Sebastian Wick
(
Red Hat
)
Flatpak and Portals: A Status Update
(Main Track)
Sebastian Wick
(
Red Hat
)
12:00 - 12:40
Flatpak has become the de facto standard for distributing desktop Linux applications across distributions, and the XDG Desktop Portal ecosystem continues to evolve alongside it. This talk provides a status update on both projects: what's shipped recently, what's in progress, and where things are headed. We'll cover new, updated and planned portal interfaces, ongoing efforts to modernize the internals of Flatpak and preparations for a next-gen Flatpak. Whether you're an application developer, a desktop environment maintainer, or simply a curious user, come find out where things stand and how you can get involved.
12:40
Lunch
Lunch
12:40 - 14:05
14:05
Designing Local-First GNOME Apps
-
Tobias Bernard
(
Modal
)
Designing Local-First GNOME Apps
(Main Track)
Tobias Bernard
(
Modal
)
14:05 - 14:45
Over the past year Modal Collective has been working towards bringing local-first sync to native GNOME apps. As part of this, we built Reflection, a collaborative GTK notes app, improved p2panda APIs and documentation, organized developer events, and did user testing. Another important part of this project was thinking about new user interfaces paradigms. Building complex local-first apps requires answering a lot of new, difficult questions in order to do seemingly simple things. How do you save and and delete documents? What does it mean to have a user account? How do you manage groups and permissions? What novel threats do we need to consider? In this talk I'll discuss some of the design work we did as part of the Reflection project. This includes user interface experiments that are not implemented yet, questions we don't have clear answers to at the moment, and what we think needs solving most urgently.
14:45
Streamlined Application Development Experience at KDE
-
Nicolas Fella
Streamlined Application Development Experience at KDE
(Main Track)
Nicolas Fella
14:45 - 15:25
In 2024 the KDE community elected "Streamlined Application Development Experience" as one of their goals for the coming years. In this talk we are going to explore what this means, what has been achieved since then, and what the future of developing KDE applications will hold.
15:25
Break
Break
15:25 - 15:45
15:45
EU is breaking up with MS Office: Here's What Works for Linux Users
-
Eeshaan Sawant
(
Engineering @ONLYOFFICE
)
EU is breaking up with MS Office: Here's What Works for Linux Users
(Main Track)
Eeshaan Sawant
(
Engineering @ONLYOFFICE
)
15:45 - 16:25
The EU is moving off proprietary platforms and onto Linux in the name of digital sovereignty. That gives us a unique opportunity to build up the Linux app ecosystem. Specifically, office suites are going to be singled out first, whether you're a government, a company, or a non-profit working with EU offices. But the many open-source document suites we have today — LibreOffice, Collabora, ONLYOFFICE, and more — most still have many gaps that keep the experience from feeling really complete: low fidelity between editors, broken formatting, dated UI, poor use of AI, and real-time collaboration that feels bolted on rather than built in. Using ONLYOFFICE as a case study, I'll walk through three things: the engineering decisions we made to address these gaps, why those decisions made Linux users, and not Windows or Mac, our largest base, and what the rest of the Linux app ecosystem can take from any of it. If you are involved in the building of any kind of Linux app trying to win a serious user base, you are in the right room.
16:25
Digging Through the App Cemetery: Sustaining a Fork
-
Evangelos Paterakis
(
GNOME
)
Digging Through the App Cemetery: Sustaining a Fork
(Main Track)
Evangelos Paterakis
(
GNOME
)
16:25 - 17:05
We are living through an unprecedented boom in indie app development on our platforms, which introduces new challenges at a larger scale. Every week, Flathub gets flooded with new, high-quality and innovative projects, but how many survive the test of time? Is there life after EOL? Can AI help? Pressing the fork button is the easy part. Find out the social rules around forking, how to lay the foundations for long-term sustainability without burning out maintainers.
17:05
Tuxdoctor
-
Petr Hodina
Tuxdoctor
(Main Track)
Petr Hodina
17:05 - 17:45
TuxDoctor: A Hardware Diagnostic Tool for Mobile Linux Mobile Linux devices span a wide range of hardware, distributions, and UI stacks making it hard to know whether a phone or tablet is actually working correctly. TuxDoctor is an open-source diagnostic tool written in Rust that brings a consistent, reproducible way to test mobile Linux hardware. It runs a suite of tests covering connectivity (Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, NFC), sensors (accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer, light, proximity), audio and haptics, camera, screen, biometrics, and battery health. Each test reports a clear pass/fail/skip status and produces a shareable local report including full device and OS information. TuxDoctor ships a GTK interface alongside a CLI and a background daemon, and is packaged for both postmarketOS (Alpine) and Mobian (Debian). This talk will cover the architecture, the challenges of writing portable hardware tests across diverse ARM devices, and how the tool can help users, developers, and porters evaluate device health. https://tuxdoctor.com/
Sunday, 17 May 2026
09:55
Announcements
Announcements
09:55 - 10:00
10:00
Growing the Linux App Ecosystem with RISC-V and RVA23 Platforms
-
René Rebe
(
ExactCode GmbH
)
Growing the Linux App Ecosystem with RISC-V and RVA23 Platforms
(Main Track)
René Rebe
(
ExactCode GmbH
)
10:00 - 10:40
The Linux application ecosystem continues to expand as new hardware platforms and distribution channels bring Linux to more developers and users worldwide. One of the most promising developments in this space is the rapid growth of the RISC-V ecosystem, which introduces an open instruction set architecture designed to encourage innovation and collaboration across hardware and software communities. With the introduction of the RVA23 profile, RISC-V platforms are becoming more standardized and software-friendly, enabling better compatibility for operating systems, development tools, and applications. These improvements help reduce fragmentation and make it easier for developers to build and distribute applications that run reliably across multiple RISC-V devices. This session explores how emerging RISC-V platforms—particularly new developer systems and laptops—are helping expand the reach of Linux applications and create new opportunities for developers. We will discuss how standardized profiles like RVA23 support better software portability, how open hardware platforms can attract new contributors, and why growing the developer base is essential for sustaining the Linux app ecosystem. Attendees will gain insight into how hardware innovation and open-source collaboration can reinforce each other, enabling a broader and more resilient Linux ecosystem. The session will also highlight practical ways developers, distributions, and communities can participate in building a thriving Linux application landscape for the next generation of computing platforms.
10:40
Spectrum: a fail-closed approach to desktop security
-
Alyssa Ross
Spectrum: a fail-closed approach to desktop security
(Main Track)
Alyssa Ross
10:40 - 11:20
[Spectrum](https://spectrum-os.org) is a desktop Linux operating system with a focus on security. Each application instance, and some drivers, are run in their own virtual machines, but this virtualization is designed to be as transparent as possible to users using standard mechanisms like cross-domain virtio-gpu and XDG Desktop Portals in a new way. Other desktop Linux systems struggle to take full advantage of the security architecture of Wayland, Flatpak, etc. due to their need to maintain compatibility with applications that were not designed with modern interfaces in mind. This talk will demonstrate how Spectrum is able to use these technologies to their full potential thanks to its positioning, which lets us prioritize security over legacy features, while still aiming for maximal compatibility with the modern Linux application ecosystem and user expectations.
11:20
Break
Break
11:20 - 11:40
11:40
TinySPARQL, LocalSearch, and the future of search in GNOME (Redux)
-
Carlos Garnacho
(
Red Hat
)
TinySPARQL, LocalSearch, and the future of search in GNOME (Redux)
(Main Track)
Carlos Garnacho
(
Red Hat
)
11:40 - 12:20
This talk is a continuation (and partial rehash) of last year's "TinySPARQL, LocalSearch, and the future of search in GNOME", with the additional knowledge gained over the course of a year. If you want to hear about fancy concepts such as embeddings, vector databases and similarity search. This might be your talk.
12:20
BuildStream, KDE and reflecting on software compilation
-
Aleix Pol Gonzalez
(
KDE
)
BuildStream, KDE and reflecting on software compilation
(Main Track)
Aleix Pol Gonzalez
(
KDE
)
12:20 - 13:00
In recent months I've been exploring further the adoption of BuildStream in KDE with the goal to improve how we deliver our software. I'll discuss how this affects the compilation of KDE's flatpak runtime, KDE's flatpak applications and KDE Linux. This work will be contra-posed to the status quo, namely the usage of flatpak-builder, ArchLinux packages for KDE Linux and the many other tools we might find on the way. The bulk of the work in this presentation has been sponsored by Codethink.
13:00
Lunch Break
Lunch Break
13:00 - 14:10
14:10
Flatpak Next
-
Sebastian Wick
(
Red Hat
)
Adrian Vovk
(
Red Hat
)
Flatpak Next
(Main Track)
Sebastian Wick
(
Red Hat
)
Adrian Vovk
(
Red Hat
)
14:10 - 14:50
An exploration of the mistakes we made the first time around, how the world around us has changed, and how the next generation of Flatpak and Portals will look like.
14:50
How to Crash Nicely
-
Harald Sitter
How to Crash Nicely
(Main Track)
Harald Sitter
14:50 - 15:30
We'll look at KDE Plasma's magnificent crash reporting system and how it enables users to submit crash reports conveniently. Through the amount of aggregated crashes, developers can prioritize issues correctly and get enough data points to diagnose and resolve the underlying causes. From collecting cores, over preparing the submission, to eventual presentation to the developer, we will look at the entire journey a crash takes in KDE Plasma.
15:30
Break
Break
15:30 - 15:45
15:45
Emergence: a local-first synchronization mechanism for personal user data
-
Carlos Garnacho
(
Red Hat
)
Emergence: a local-first synchronization mechanism for personal user data
(Main Track)
Carlos Garnacho
(
Red Hat
)
15:45 - 16:25
Emergence is (primarily) a data replication/synchronization mechanism for TinySparql databases, based on W3C standards, and oriented to personal data across multiple personal devices. A technical overview was presented for this project at Guadec 2023 in Riga, mostly as a research concept. This talk will cover the journey in materializing the project, the learnings that can be extrapolated to other user data, and some musings on how a more englobing mechanism ready to use in/across desktop environments could look like.
16:25
Open Source Office on the Linux Desktop
-
Thorsten Behr
(
Collabora
)
Open Source Office on the Linux Desktop
Thorsten Behr
(
Collabora
)
16:25 - 17:05
Join a founder of LibreOffice for an in-depth look at the current state of open source Office applications on the Linux desktop. This talk will explore the evolving landscape of productivity tools, comparing different approaches to native platform integration and the ongoing challenges of keeping pace with rapidly changing desktop toolkits. We will examine modern packaging and distribution strategies, including native packages, Flatpak, and Snap, and discuss the practical implications for users and administrators. Topics such as font management, printing, and the balance between online and offline collaboration will be covered from a real-world deployment perspective. A key focus of the session is the growing importance of digital sovereignty. Office suites are not just productivity tools - they are central to how organizations create, store, and control their data. Using real migration efforts such as those in Schleswig-Holstein and the Austrian military, we will explore how public institutions are reducing dependency on proprietary vendors by adopting open standards like ODF, and open source solutions. This includes regaining control over document formats, update cycles, and data flows, as well as the broader challenges that come with such transitions. Finally, the talk will showcase recent design improvements and new features in Collabora Office on the desktop, highlighting how modern open source solutions continue to evolve to meet both user expectations and strategic requirements. Whether you are a developer, system integrator, or FOSS end-user, this session provides insight into the technical and organizational realities shaping the future of Office on the Linux desktop.
17:05
Making our own Fate: Why GNOME and KDE need operating systems
-
Jorge Castro
Making our own Fate: Why GNOME and KDE need operating systems
(Main Track)
Jorge Castro
17:05 - 17:45
Project sovereignty isn't just about hosting infrastructure, it's about shipping an experience as intended by the people who create it. In this talk I will explain why I think GNOME and KDE should not only make their own operating systems, but to use them in a way to drive modern linux development - all for a better user experience. I will cover how this matters for each pillar of discussion: Digital Sovereignty - More than ever projects are working to ensure supply chain security as well as infrastructure independence. I will talk about how open standards make that happen. We overdiscuss implementation details sometime, I want to focus on the "APIs" we can use to make this happen. AI and Machine Learning - I will discuss the impact of AI in Linux infrastructure and how it will affect our projects and communities. Ecosystem Growth, Innovation, and Platform diversity - I will discuss the importance of growing a developer community around modern Linux. And where do GNOME and KDE place their operating systems? Linux distributions have been strategic partners for these organizations for _decades_. Who is competing with who? I plan on discussing how the cloud native community handles this sort of situation in a way that gets everybody wins. The work done by the UAPI Group and cloud-native projects like bootc have certainly caught the eyes of infrastructure folks. I will explain how we can leverage this massive investment in modern linux for the desktop. I have been collecting 5 years of data on this, and look forward to sharing it with the community. There will be charts and dinosaurs in this talk.
17:45
17:45 - 18:00