Updated speakers

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<div class="name">Molly de Blanc</div>
<div class="title">Insecure connections: Love and mental health in our digital lives</div>
<div class="links"><a href="schedule.html#tue5">Talk Slot</a>
</div><div class="abstract">
The lens through which we view--and know--what it means to love, to be ourselves, and to connect with others is now backed by microchips and millions of lines of code. As our lives continue to become increasingly managed by our devices, we need to ask ourselves what we're gaining--and what we're giving up--by allowing technology into the spaces that make our hearts ache and that keep us up at night.
</div><div class="abstract">
This talk will weave together two narratives essential to many people: health and love. It will examine the ways in which both of these topics have become entwined with computing, what that means for us as individuals, and what that means for our individual and societal user freedoms.
</div><div class="bio">
Molly de Blanc is a free software activist. She works at the Free Software Foundation as the campaigns manager, organizing and educating around free software issues. She serves as a director on the Open Source Initiative board of directors and is a contributor to the Debian project.
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<div class="name">Carol Chen</div>
<div class="title">Manage a community like conducting an orchestra - with a lot of hand waving</div>
<div class="links"><a href="schedule.html#mon11">Talk Slot</a>
</div><div class="abstract">
Have you attended an orchestral performance and wondered what it is exactly that conductors do besides waving their arms in the air? Most of the value that the conductor (community manager) brings to the orchestra (community) is carried out before the performance (behind the scenes). In this session, I will share my experiences in orchestras and open source communities big and small across different countries. How do you take care of the different types of contributors/players and bring out their best? What happens when they have differences in opinion on how to collaborate? How do you make the community welcoming and inclusive especially for people with different backgrounds and who may not speak your (programming) language? Join me on a musical journey through some of the common (and perhaps not so common) dissonances of community orchestration and their possible resolutions!
</div><div class="bio">
Carol Chen is a Community Architect at Red Hat, supporting several upstream communities such as Ansible and ManageIQ. She has been actively involved in open source communities while working for Jolla and Nokia previously. In addition, she also has experiences in software development/integration in her 12 years in the mobile industry. On a personal note, Carol plays the Timpani in an orchestra in Tampere, Finland, where she now calls home.
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<div class="name">Magnus Hagander</div>
<div class="title">PostgreSQL gotchas for app developers</div>
<div class="links"><a href="schedule.html#mon2">Talk Slot</a>
</div><div class="abstract">
Some things when it comes to working with databases are obvious to everybody. Other things are hidden from everybody. Yet some can be obvious to an experienced DBA, but come as a big surprise to application developers, and these can often be different between different databases.
</div><div class="abstract">
In this talk I'll go through some of the common mistakes I've seen in applications built against PostgreSQL that made perfect sense, yet were suboptimal or failed.
</div><div class="bio">
Magnus Hagander is a member of the PostgreSQL Core Team and a developer and code committer in the PostgreSQL Global Development Group.
</div><div class="bio">
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<div class="name">Daniel Hansson</div>
<div class="title">The NextCloud VM</div>
<div class="links"><a href="schedule.html#mon11">Talk Slot</a>
</div><div class="abstract">
The Nextcloud VM is a popular way to deploy your Nextcloud for the first time. The scripts make it easy for any sysadmin to deploy in almost any environment. It's made with simplicity in mind and is therefore also very popular amongst users that aren't familiar with Linux.
</div><div class="abstract">
This talk will explain a little bit about the history behind the VM and how it's developed over time.
</div><div class="bio">
TBD
I've been active in the Nextcloud community since the beginning and is the main developer of the Nextcloud VM. I founded both Tech and Me, and T&M Hansson IT AB.
</div><div class="bio">
You can find out more about the NextCloud VM here: <a href='https://hanssonit.se/nextcloud-vm'>https://hanssonit.se/nextcloud-vm</a>, and here: <a href='https://github.com/nextcloud/vm'>https://github.com/nextcloud/vm</a>.
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